Intersectional Tech: Black Users in Digital Gaming

Intersectional Tech

Black Users in Digital Gaming
 
Publisher: LSU Press
Date of Publication:
Number of Volumes: Hardback
 
Normal price:

Publisher's listprice:
EUR 52.00
Estimated price in HUF:
21 457 HUF (20 436 HUF + 5% VAT)
Why estimated?
 
Your price:

19 741 (18 801 HUF + 5% VAT )
discount is: 8% (approx 1 717 HUF off)
The discount is only available for 'Alert of Favourite Topics' newsletter recipients.
Click here to subscribe.
 
Availability:

Uncertain availability. Please turn to our customer service.
Can't you provide more accurate information?
 
 
 
 
 
Product details:

ISBN13:9780807171226
ISBN10:08071712211
Binding:Hardback
No. of pages:222 pages
Size:216x140 mm
Weight:398 g
Language:English
Illustrations: 9 halftones, scattered
0
Category:
Short description:

Examines blackness in gaming at the intersections of race, gender, sexuality, and (dis)ability. Situating her argument within the context of Gamergate and the Black Lives Matter movement, Kishonna Gray highlights the inescapable chains that bind marginalized populations to stereotypical frames and limited narratives in video games.

Long description:
In Intersectional Tech: Black Users in Digital Gaming, Kishonna L. Gray interrogates blackness in gaming at the intersections of race, gender, sexuality, and (dis)ability. Situating her argument within the context of the concurrent, seemingly unrelated events of Gamergate and the Black Lives Matter movement, Gray highlights the inescapable chains that bind marginalized populations to stereotypical frames and limited narratives in video games. Intersectional Tech explores the ways that the multiple identities of black gamers some obvious within the context of games, some more easily concealed affect their experiences of gaming.

The normalization of whiteness and masculinity in digital culture inevitably leads to isolation, exclusion, and punishment of marginalized people. Yet, Gray argues, we must also examine the individual struggles of prejudice, discrimination, and microaggressions within larger institutional practices that sustain the oppression. These ""new"" racisms and a complementary colorblind ideology are a kind of digital Jim Crow, a new mode of the same strategies of oppression that have targeted black communities throughout American history.

Drawing on extensive interviews that engage critically with identity development and justice issues in gaming, Gray explores the capacity for gaming culture to foster critical consciousness, aid in participatory democracy, and effect social change. Intersectional Tech is rooted in concrete situations of marginalized members within gaming culture. It reveals that despite the truths articulated by those who expose the sexism, racism, misogyny, and homophobia that are commonplace within gaming communities, hegemonic narratives continue to be privileged. This text, in contrast, centers the perspectives that are often ignored and provides a critical corrective to notions of gaming as a predominantly white and male space.