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<TITLE>Caluya, 'Beyond Avatars', UNSW JMRC research seminar tomorrow, Thurs 17/9, 2-4pm</TITLE>
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<FONT SIZE="4"><FONT FACE="Calibri, Verdana, Helvetica, Arial"><SPAN STYLE='font-size:14pt'><B><U>Journalism and Media Research Centre Research Seminars<BR>
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</SPAN><FONT SIZE="5"><SPAN STYLE='font-size:18pt'><B><I>Beyond Avatars:<BR>
Rethinking the Political in Online Game Worlds<BR>
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<B>Thursday 17 September, 2pm-4pm<BR>
Seminar Room, 3-5 Eurimbla St<BR>
JMRC, UNSW<BR>
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Dr. Gilbert Caluya<BR>
Postdoctoral Research Fellow, Hawke Research Institute, Uni SA<BR>
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For over three decades now studies of videogames have tended to focus on the politics of representation. Nowhere has this been more prominent than in research into online games, which has tended to treat such games as a collection of avatars or otherwise as literary or visual texts. This presentation, drawn from over two years of online gaming in massively mutli-player online games (MMORPGs), argues that the research agenda into online gaming has largely been hijacked by the media panic surrounding videogames, which has ultimately misrepresented the political in online game worlds. Instead of letting offline politics define the research of online politics, this presentation argues for an ‘in-game analysis’ as a grounded-theory approach to studying online game worlds. This approach requires us to take seriously MMOs as complex social events constructed out of friendships and relationships but also as political landscapes full of intrigue and betrayal. This will allow us to see how the sociality of guilds, the politics of killing and the inflation of online economies are rich socio-political events that are imbricated with offline worlds.<BR>
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<B>Gilbert Caluya</B> is a Postdoctoral Research Fellow of the Hawke Research Institute at the University of South Australia. His most recent research focuses on the cultural geography of everyday fears. He has published several articles and chapters on embodiment, desire and emotion, which have relied on autoethnographic research. This presentation draws on his expertise in autoethnographic methods to explore the cultural geography of online worlds.<BR>
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Gerard Goggin <BR>
Professor of Digital Communication <BR>
& Deputy Director <BR>
Journalism and Media Research Centre <BR>
University of New South Wales <BR>
Sydney 2052 NSW Australia <BR>
<a href="http://jmrc.arts.unsw.edu.au/">http://jmrc.arts.unsw.edu.au/</a> <BR>
e: <a href="g.goggin@unsw.edu.au">g.goggin@unsw.edu.au</a> <BR>
w: +61 2 9385 8532 <BR>
f: +61 2 9385 8528 <BR>
m: +61 428 66 88 24 <BR>
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