Returning fire : Interventions in video game culture
(2016, original release: 2011)

Nonfiction

eVideo

Provider: Kanopy

Details

EDITION
[Edited version]
DESCRIPTION

1 online resource (2 video files, approximately 90 minutes) : digital, .flv file, sound

ISBN/ISSN
1216740
LANGUAGE
English
NOTES

Editor, Roger Stahl ; original music, Roger Stahl, Andrew Killoy

Video games like Modern Warfare, America's Army, Medal of Honor, and Battlefield are part of an exploding market of war games whose revenues now far outpace even the biggest Hollywood blockbusters. The sophistication of these games is undeniable, offering users a stunningly realistic experience of ground combat and a glimpse into the increasingly virtual world of long-distance, push-button warfare. Far less clear, though, is what these games are doing to users, our political culture, and our capacity to empathize with people directly affected by the actual trauma of war. For the culture-jamming activists featured in this film, these uncertainties were a call to action. In three separate vignettes, we see how Anne-Marie Schleiner, Wafaa Bilal, and Joseph Delappe moved dissent from the streets to our screens, infiltrating war games in an attempt to break the hypnotic spell of "militainment." Their work forces all of us -- gamers and non-gamers alike -- to think critically about what it means when the clinical tools of real-world killing become forms of consumer play

Narrator, Roger Stahl ; participants, Joseph Delappe, Anne-Marie Schleiner, Wafaa Bilal

Originally produced by Media Education Foundation in 2011

Grade 9+

Higher education

Mode of access: World Wide Web

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