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Games and Culture
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Why Game (Culture) Studies Now?

Constance A. Steinkuehler

University of Wisconsin–Madison

Games are an extremely valuable context for the study of cognition as inter(action) in the social and material world. They provide a representational trace of both individual and collective activity and how it changes over time, enabling the researcher to unpack the bidirectional influence of self and society. As both designed object and emergent culture, g/Games (a) consist of overlapping well-defined problems enveloped in ill-defined problems that render their solutions meaningful; (b) function as naturally occurring, selfsustaining, indigenous versions of online learning communities; and (c) simultaneously function as both culture and cultural object—as microcosms for studying the emergence, maintenance, transformation, and even collapse of online affinity groups and as talkaboutable objects that function as tokens in public conversations of broader societal issues within contemporary offline society. In this article, the author unpacks each of these claims in the context of the massively multiplayer online games.

Key Words: massively multiplayer online games • cognition • learning • literacy • problem solving

Games and Culture, Vol. 1, No. 1, 97-102 (2006)
DOI: 10.1177/1555412005281911


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