Critical Protocols in Indigenous Gamespace

Type de ressource
Article de revue
Auteur/contributeur
Titre
Critical Protocols in Indigenous Gamespace
Résumé
This article examines Indigenous video games that critique mainstream environmental politics at the level of mechanics. An analysis of video games’ influences on ecological values requires looking beyond the representational to the mechanical relationships between player and software. As a cultural–computational medium, video games are embedded with ethics of interaction that inflect this representational dimension by requiring that players generate the text as participant. With the recent visibility of Indigenous rights movements, developers have embedded Indigenous cultural protocols in the mechanical interactions (or technical protocols) of gameplay. In the context of critique, their integration produces “critical protocols,” configurations of gamic action that encourage players to evaluate their treatment of real-world environments. Critical protocols emerge between the technical and cultural, where scripts for interaction in algorithmic spaces intervene in affirmative game design and work as an analog beyond the game. Indigenous developers call for new ways of computing and critiquing settler digitality through play. These games aim toward representational as well as computational sovereignty.
Publication
Games and Culture
Volume
17
Numéro
1
Pages
3-25
Date
1 janvier 2022
Abrév. de revue
Games and Culture
Langue
Anglais
ISSN
1555-4120
Consulté le
12/12/2021 09:12
Catalogue de bibl.
SAGE Journals
Extra
Publisher: SAGE Publications
Référence
Miner, J. D. (2022). Critical Protocols in Indigenous Gamespace. Games and Culture, 17(1), 3‑25. https://doi.org/10.1177/15554120211005366
2. Auteur.rice.s et créateur.rice.s
4. Corpus analysé
4. Lieu de production du savoir
5. Pratiques médiatiques