This book helps readers better understand their own relationships - as players, designers, consumers, and citizens - with digital role playing games. "Dungeons, Dragons, and Digital Denizens" is a collection of scholarly essays that seeks to represent the far-reaching scope and implications of digital role-playing games as both cultural and academic artifacts. As a genre, digital role playing games have undergone constant and radical revision, pushing not only multiple boundaries of game development, but also the playing strategies and experiences of players. Divided into three distinct sections, this premiere volume captures the distinctiveness of different game types, the forms of play they engender and their social and cultural implications. Contributors examine a range of games, from classics like Final Fantasy to blockbusters like World of Warcraft to obscure genre bending titles like Lux Pain. Working from a broad range of disciplines such as ecocritism, rhetoric, performance, gender, and communication, these essays yield insights that enrich the field of game studies and further illuminate the cultural, psychological and philosophical implications of a society that increasingly produces, plays and discourses about role playing games. "Approaches to Digital Game Studies" examines the medium of digital games and brings together a range of voices from different disciplines to ask questions fundamental to game studies. This innovative series advances ongoing conversations and initiates new areas of inquiry in the field. Each volume consists of a collection of essays organized around a single ludic, functional or thematic genre of digital game.
This book helps readers better understand their own relationships - as players, designers, consumers, and citizens - with digital role playing games.About the AuthorJoshua Call, Ph.D. is an Assistant Professor in the Department of English at Grandview University. Katie Whitlock, Ph.D. is an Assistant Professor in the Theatre Department at the California State University, Chico. Gerald Voorhees is Assistant Professor of Communication in the departments of Speech and New Media Communication at Oregon State University.
Reviews"Chad Meister's Evil: A Guide for the Perplexed is a clearly written and informative introduction to the problem of evil. It presents the most important recent developments in thinking about the problem of evil in a way that is accessible to anyone with an interest in the topic. While many books claim to do this, Meister's book actually delivers the goods and I highly recommend it." (Stewart Goetz, Chair and Professor, Department of Philosophy and Religion, Ursinus College, USA)"
Book InformationISBN 9781441195180
Author Gerald A. VoorheesFormat Paperback
Page Count 392
Imprint Continuum Publishing CorporationPublisher Continuum Publishing Corporation
Series Approaches to Digital Game StudiesWeight(grams) 554g