語系:
繁體中文
English
說明(常見問題)
登入
回首頁
切換:
標籤
|
MARC模式
|
ISBD
Playfulness 1947-2017 : = Hermeneuti...
~
McDonald, Peter Douglas.
Playfulness 1947-2017 : = Hermeneutics, Aesthetics, Games.
紀錄類型:
書目-語言資料,手稿 : Monograph/item
正題名/作者:
Playfulness 1947-2017 :/
其他題名:
Hermeneutics, Aesthetics, Games.
作者:
McDonald, Peter Douglas.
面頁冊數:
1 online resource (298 pages)
附註:
Source: Dissertation Abstracts International, Volume: 79-11(E), Section: A.
Contained By:
Dissertation Abstracts International79-11A(E).
標題:
Aesthetics. -
電子資源:
click for full text (PQDT)
ISBN:
9780438084230
Playfulness 1947-2017 : = Hermeneutics, Aesthetics, Games.
McDonald, Peter Douglas.
Playfulness 1947-2017 :
Hermeneutics, Aesthetics, Games. - 1 online resource (298 pages)
Source: Dissertation Abstracts International, Volume: 79-11(E), Section: A.
Thesis (Ph.D.)--The University of Chicago, 2018.
Includes bibliographical references
The history of video games has been dominated by technological determinism, with scholars tracing a neat line from William Higginbotham's first game on an oscilloscope screen through more and more complex hardware to 2017's Nintendo Switch. In this dissertation, I tell the story of video games differently, from the premise that play itself had to be invented as a medium before designers, artists, writers, and engineers could explore its possibilities. While game pieces, accompanying text, and illustrated boards had previously been objects of artistic and commercial manipulation, it was only after the Second World War that the experience of play itself was intentionally shaped through the design of rules, goals, and game mechanics. Games became "graphs of a self-graphing world," as Mark Seltzer describes them, places where complex systems model and simulate their own workings. This dissertation uses playfulness to track the lineage that extends from the development of avant-garde games in the 1950s and 60s to the establishment of video games as the hegemonic form of play in the 1990s. Playfulness, I argue, involves an interpretive relation to play that can reveal the social commitments, aesthetics concerns, and historical contexts that gave rise to a new culture of games. In particular, I focus on four different kinds of playfulness: replayability, secrecy, trickiness, and fairness. Each of these categories is an interpretive response to an important series of questions that links the pleasures of specific games, to theoretical problems involved in conceptualizing play, and to a wider social world. In playfulness, a formal quality of games---its boundaries, rules, tension, or goals---itself becomes the topic to self-reflexively play with.
Electronic reproduction.
Ann Arbor, Mich. :
ProQuest,
2018
Mode of access: World Wide Web
ISBN: 9780438084230Subjects--Topical Terms:
555008
Aesthetics.
Index Terms--Genre/Form:
554714
Electronic books.
Playfulness 1947-2017 : = Hermeneutics, Aesthetics, Games.
LDR
:06272ntm a2200385Ki 4500
001
919015
005
20181106103645.5
006
m o u
007
cr mn||||a|a||
008
190606s2018 xx obm 000 0 eng d
020
$a
9780438084230
035
$a
(MiAaPQ)AAI10792857
035
$a
(MiAaPQ)uchicago:14302
035
$a
AAI10792857
040
$a
MiAaPQ
$b
eng
$c
MiAaPQ
$d
NTU
100
1
$a
McDonald, Peter Douglas.
$3
1193487
245
1 0
$a
Playfulness 1947-2017 :
$b
Hermeneutics, Aesthetics, Games.
264
0
$c
2018
300
$a
1 online resource (298 pages)
336
$a
text
$b
txt
$2
rdacontent
337
$a
computer
$b
c
$2
rdamedia
338
$a
online resource
$b
cr
$2
rdacarrier
500
$a
Source: Dissertation Abstracts International, Volume: 79-11(E), Section: A.
500
$a
Advisers: Bill Brown; Patrick Jagoda.
502
$a
Thesis (Ph.D.)--The University of Chicago, 2018.
504
$a
Includes bibliographical references
520
$a
The history of video games has been dominated by technological determinism, with scholars tracing a neat line from William Higginbotham's first game on an oscilloscope screen through more and more complex hardware to 2017's Nintendo Switch. In this dissertation, I tell the story of video games differently, from the premise that play itself had to be invented as a medium before designers, artists, writers, and engineers could explore its possibilities. While game pieces, accompanying text, and illustrated boards had previously been objects of artistic and commercial manipulation, it was only after the Second World War that the experience of play itself was intentionally shaped through the design of rules, goals, and game mechanics. Games became "graphs of a self-graphing world," as Mark Seltzer describes them, places where complex systems model and simulate their own workings. This dissertation uses playfulness to track the lineage that extends from the development of avant-garde games in the 1950s and 60s to the establishment of video games as the hegemonic form of play in the 1990s. Playfulness, I argue, involves an interpretive relation to play that can reveal the social commitments, aesthetics concerns, and historical contexts that gave rise to a new culture of games. In particular, I focus on four different kinds of playfulness: replayability, secrecy, trickiness, and fairness. Each of these categories is an interpretive response to an important series of questions that links the pleasures of specific games, to theoretical problems involved in conceptualizing play, and to a wider social world. In playfulness, a formal quality of games---its boundaries, rules, tension, or goals---itself becomes the topic to self-reflexively play with.
520
$a
In each of my four chapters, I trace one strand of an aesthetic genealogy that runs from the mid-twentieth century to the present. In each chapter I begin with an experimental game that seems nearly unplayable because it lacks rules, goals, or mechanics. These works are all by artists associated with Fluxus, which serves as a microcosm of postmodern aesthetics and as an exemplary engagement with game design. These works make explicit the implicit tensions within pervasive discourses of play. Each of my chapters explores a web of intellectual histories where the subtle metaphors of play start to matter and become literal. Fluxus works heighten the contradictions around play as a source of pleasure, and point forward to a new synthesis that I argue is achieved by the video games of the 1990s. These video games successfully internalize the tensions of the earlier avant-garde as a topic of playful uncertainty. Rather than a narrative of technical progress, my dissertation argues that the history of video games to the present has been an ongoing negotiation of play's aesthetic limits.
520
$a
In Chapter One, "Replayability: Play without Truth," I stage the intellectual genealogy that brought games into the forefront of postwar thought. In the early twentieth century, games---especially chess---became crucial metaphors for understanding complex interacting systems. Chess showed how linguistic reference could be arbitrary and differential, in much the same way that a pawn's value depends on its position relative to other pieces. More broadly, games exemplified the inner working of complex systems in disciplines as diverse as anthropology, cybernetics, and psychology. These metaphors set the stage for a dialectical reversal in postwar thought. From postmodern theory to pop-psychology, playfulness was celebrated as an aesthetic of disruption, subversion, agency, self-reflection, change, and irony. Play's postmodern valences made new media, games, and hypertext fiction a promising subject of study in the 1980s and early 1990s, and the theoretical framework of contemporary game studies owes a direct and unacknowledged debt to this history whose repercussions I explore.
520
$a
Having established a frame for my inquiry, Chapter Two, "Secrecy: Play without Reason" develops a full theory of playfulness. I examine its common definition in psychology and game studies, and argue that they are too narrow to account for the multiple ways that playfulness manifests itself in ordinary life. One classic definition, for instance, holds that playfulness is a compound of spontaneity, manifest joy, and humor. As a counter example, I use this chapter to explore the ways that secrecy can be playful, while simultaneously being ritualized, hidden, and serious. My argument turns on a close reading of Yoko Ono's use of concealment to create absurd game instructions. Ono's strategy is to give clear but outlandish rules, while implying that the goal must remain a secret until the game is played. As a result, her work can often obscure the difference between violence, trauma, and play by turning the formal element of game goals into a self-reflexive topic for play. (Abstract shortened by ProQuest.).
533
$a
Electronic reproduction.
$b
Ann Arbor, Mich. :
$c
ProQuest,
$d
2018
538
$a
Mode of access: World Wide Web
650
4
$a
Aesthetics.
$3
555008
650
4
$a
Art criticism.
$3
576960
650
4
$a
Multimedia communications.
$3
655342
655
7
$a
Electronic books.
$2
local
$3
554714
690
$a
0650
690
$a
0365
690
$a
0558
710
2
$a
ProQuest Information and Learning Co.
$3
1178819
710
2
$a
The University of Chicago.
$b
English Language and Literature.
$3
1190199
773
0
$t
Dissertation Abstracts International
$g
79-11A(E).
856
4 0
$u
http://pqdd.sinica.edu.tw/twdaoapp/servlet/advanced?query=10792857
$z
click for full text (PQDT)
筆 0 讀者評論
多媒體
評論
新增評論
分享你的心得
Export
取書館別
處理中
...
變更密碼[密碼必須為2種組合(英文和數字)及長度為10碼以上]
登入