gender and videogames dr ewan kirkland bcuc

78
Gender and Videogames Dr Ewan Kirkland BCUC

Upload: eris

Post on 17-Jan-2016

50 views

Category:

Documents


0 download

DESCRIPTION

Gender and Videogames Dr Ewan Kirkland BCUC. Videogames are an extremely masculine medium. sexualised representation of female characters. male heroes rescuing helpless females. overwhelming masculinity of the implied game player. Soul Calibre. Dead or Alive. Catwoman. - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

TRANSCRIPT

Page 1: Gender and Videogames Dr Ewan Kirkland BCUC

Gender and VideogamesDr Ewan Kirkland

BCUC

Page 2: Gender and Videogames Dr Ewan Kirkland BCUC

Videogames are an extremely masculine medium

                             

 

Page 3: Gender and Videogames Dr Ewan Kirkland BCUC

overwhelming masculinity of the implied game player

male heroes rescuing helpless females

sexualised representation of female characters

Page 4: Gender and Videogames Dr Ewan Kirkland BCUC

Soul Calibre

Page 5: Gender and Videogames Dr Ewan Kirkland BCUC

Dead or Alive

Page 6: Gender and Videogames Dr Ewan Kirkland BCUC

Catwoman

Page 7: Gender and Videogames Dr Ewan Kirkland BCUC

Tomb Raider heroine Lara Croft

Page 8: Gender and Videogames Dr Ewan Kirkland BCUC

Donkey Kong

Page 9: Gender and Videogames Dr Ewan Kirkland BCUC

Shadow of Colossus

Page 10: Gender and Videogames Dr Ewan Kirkland BCUC

Vewtiful Joe

Page 11: Gender and Videogames Dr Ewan Kirkland BCUC

Cold Fear

Page 12: Gender and Videogames Dr Ewan Kirkland BCUC

SH4

Page 13: Gender and Videogames Dr Ewan Kirkland BCUC

Mario

Page 14: Gender and Videogames Dr Ewan Kirkland BCUC

Sonic

Page 15: Gender and Videogames Dr Ewan Kirkland BCUC

Dante

Page 16: Gender and Videogames Dr Ewan Kirkland BCUC
Page 17: Gender and Videogames Dr Ewan Kirkland BCUC
Page 18: Gender and Videogames Dr Ewan Kirkland BCUC
Page 19: Gender and Videogames Dr Ewan Kirkland BCUC
Page 20: Gender and Videogames Dr Ewan Kirkland BCUC
Page 21: Gender and Videogames Dr Ewan Kirkland BCUC
Page 22: Gender and Videogames Dr Ewan Kirkland BCUC
Page 23: Gender and Videogames Dr Ewan Kirkland BCUC
Page 24: Gender and Videogames Dr Ewan Kirkland BCUC
Page 25: Gender and Videogames Dr Ewan Kirkland BCUC

Grand Theft Auto

Page 27: Gender and Videogames Dr Ewan Kirkland BCUC

Canis Canem Edit

Page 28: Gender and Videogames Dr Ewan Kirkland BCUC

Gameplay

Page 29: Gender and Videogames Dr Ewan Kirkland BCUC

‘Beating the prostitute, as with other aspects of the game, ties into dominant notions of masculinity and its representation, an aspect of the game that can’t be denied- even if it is contextualised in terms of a supposedly bygone retro-masculinity. The ‘70s drug culture/gangster underworld context operates to sanction the player (of whatever gender) into doing what would be, in reality, for most, unconscionable.’

Page 30: Gender and Videogames Dr Ewan Kirkland BCUC

Can you think of any game titles which presume a female or more feminine gamer?

How does this potentially impact of female gamers, and the female gaming experience?

In what ways does GTA, CEE, or any other videogame presume the player is a heterosexual male?

Page 31: Gender and Videogames Dr Ewan Kirkland BCUC

Active-male-rescue-helpless-female structure

Maximo

Page 32: Gender and Videogames Dr Ewan Kirkland BCUC

How relevant are issues such as narrative or visual design when you play a videogame?

What aspects of the gaming experience are not considered in concentrating on such aspects?

What are the limitations of focusing only on the visual and narrative aspects of gaming?

Page 33: Gender and Videogames Dr Ewan Kirkland BCUC

Context

Gender Construction

Gender Representation

Gameplay

Page 34: Gender and Videogames Dr Ewan Kirkland BCUC
Page 35: Gender and Videogames Dr Ewan Kirkland BCUC

Noah Wardrip-Fruin & Pat Harrigan (eds) (2004) First Person: New Media as Story, Performance, and Game Cambridge, Massachusetts, London: The MIT Press

Barry Atkins (2003) More than a game: The computer game as fictional form Manchester & NY: Manchester UP

Justine Cassell & Henry Jenkins (eds) (1999) From Barbie to Mortal Kombat: Gender and Computer Games Cambridge, Massachusetts & London: The MIT Press

Geoff King & Tanya Krzywinska (2006) Tomb Raiders and Space Invaders: Videogame Forms & Contexts London, New York: IB Tauris

Diane Carr, David Buckingham, Andrew Burn & Gareth Schott (2006) Computer Games: Text, Narrative, Play Cambridge & Malden (USA): Polity Press

Page 36: Gender and Videogames Dr Ewan Kirkland BCUC

game designers

social scientists

media analysts

Page 37: Gender and Videogames Dr Ewan Kirkland BCUC

Narratology / Ludology

Page 38: Gender and Videogames Dr Ewan Kirkland BCUC

narrative or storytelling aspects

Narratologists:

Geoff King & Tania Krywinska (eds) (2002) Screenplay: cinema/videogames/interfaces London & New York: Wallflower Press

traditional forms of audiovisual and narrative media

media texts

Page 39: Gender and Videogames Dr Ewan Kirkland BCUC

games: chess, tag, hide and seek

Ludologists:

criticising the assumptions, arguments and methods of narratologists

rules, structure, formalism

Page 40: Gender and Videogames Dr Ewan Kirkland BCUC

Narratologists don’t understand games

Ludologists v Narratologists:

Narratologist, in emphasising videogames’ similarity to film, television, literature, ignore what makes games games

Narratologists want to reduce games to films

Page 41: Gender and Videogames Dr Ewan Kirkland BCUC

Representation

Page 42: Gender and Videogames Dr Ewan Kirkland BCUC
Page 43: Gender and Videogames Dr Ewan Kirkland BCUC
Page 44: Gender and Videogames Dr Ewan Kirkland BCUC
Page 45: Gender and Videogames Dr Ewan Kirkland BCUC

identification

representation

Page 46: Gender and Videogames Dr Ewan Kirkland BCUC

•history

•personality

Lara Croft (Tomb Raider)

•photo-realistic

•gender, class, ethnicity

character:

cinematic

Page 47: Gender and Videogames Dr Ewan Kirkland BCUC
Page 48: Gender and Videogames Dr Ewan Kirkland BCUC
Page 49: Gender and Videogames Dr Ewan Kirkland BCUC
Page 50: Gender and Videogames Dr Ewan Kirkland BCUC
Page 51: Gender and Videogames Dr Ewan Kirkland BCUC
Page 52: Gender and Videogames Dr Ewan Kirkland BCUC
Page 53: Gender and Videogames Dr Ewan Kirkland BCUC
Page 54: Gender and Videogames Dr Ewan Kirkland BCUC
Page 55: Gender and Videogames Dr Ewan Kirkland BCUC

Does Lara Croft provide voyeuristic pleasure for heterosexual males

Page 56: Gender and Videogames Dr Ewan Kirkland BCUC

Or does the male videogame player playing Lara Croft become feminised through playing as a female character?

Does Lara Croft provide voyeuristic pleasure for heterosexual males

Page 57: Gender and Videogames Dr Ewan Kirkland BCUC

Is Lara Croft something to be looked at, or is she someone to become?

Or does the male videogame player playing Lara Croft become feminised through playing as a female character?

Does Lara Croft provide voyeuristic pleasure for heterosexual males?

Page 58: Gender and Videogames Dr Ewan Kirkland BCUC
Page 59: Gender and Videogames Dr Ewan Kirkland BCUC
Page 60: Gender and Videogames Dr Ewan Kirkland BCUC
Page 61: Gender and Videogames Dr Ewan Kirkland BCUC
Page 62: Gender and Videogames Dr Ewan Kirkland BCUC

Andrew Darley (2000) Visual Digital Culture: Surface Play and Spectacle in New Media Genres London & New York: Routledge

Page 63: Gender and Videogames Dr Ewan Kirkland BCUC

James Newman (2004) Videogames London & New York: Routledge

Page 64: Gender and Videogames Dr Ewan Kirkland BCUC

Henry Jenkins: ‘The character is little more than a cursor which mediates the players’

relationship to the story world’

Page 65: Gender and Videogames Dr Ewan Kirkland BCUC

Helen Kennedy (2002) ‘Lara Croft: Feminist Icon or Cyberbimbo? On the Limits of

Textual Analysis’ in GameStudies Vol 2, Issue 2, December

Page 66: Gender and Videogames Dr Ewan Kirkland BCUC

Espen Aarseth (2004) ‘the dimensions of Lara Croft’s body, already analyzed to

death by film theorists, are irrelevant to me as a

player, because a different-looking body would not

make me play differently… When I play I don’t even

see her body, but see through it and past it.’

Page 67: Gender and Videogames Dr Ewan Kirkland BCUC
Page 68: Gender and Videogames Dr Ewan Kirkland BCUC

Gameplay

Page 69: Gender and Videogames Dr Ewan Kirkland BCUC
Page 70: Gender and Videogames Dr Ewan Kirkland BCUC

ludologists narratologists

audiovisual media texts

remediation, convergence, intertextuality

narratives

rule-based systems

social, cultural, historical meanings of play

games

Page 71: Gender and Videogames Dr Ewan Kirkland BCUC
Page 72: Gender and Videogames Dr Ewan Kirkland BCUC
Page 73: Gender and Videogames Dr Ewan Kirkland BCUC
Page 74: Gender and Videogames Dr Ewan Kirkland BCUC
Page 75: Gender and Videogames Dr Ewan Kirkland BCUC
Page 76: Gender and Videogames Dr Ewan Kirkland BCUC
Page 77: Gender and Videogames Dr Ewan Kirkland BCUC
Page 78: Gender and Videogames Dr Ewan Kirkland BCUC