Contested Formations of Digital Game Labor

Resource type
Authors/contributors
Title
Contested Formations of Digital Game Labor
Abstract
This article introduces a special issue critically investigating contemporary formations of digital game labor, with a focus on the political-economic forces, social inequalities, and technological dynamics mutually shaping these formations. Accounts of game industry practices have been at the forefront of efforts within media studies to document and theorize conditions and transformations of labor under digital capitalism. The study of digital game labor has tended to cluster around four areas of inquiry: below-the-line labor, the creative labor of game development, player-production, and game labor politics. Providing empirically informed portraits of diverse contexts and experiences of gamework, this issue interrogates multiple dimensions of precarious work and social exclusion within an industry whose playful self-image can make it a resistant object of labor-centered analysis. The contributors to this issue promote a research orientation that is attentive to how work in the digital game industry might be made more accessible and sustainable.
Publication
Television & New Media
Volume
20
Issue
8
Pages
747-755
Date
2019
Language
en
Accessed
8/19/20, 5:48 AM
Library Catalog
tspace.library.utoronto.ca
Rights
Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivatives 4.0 International
Extra
Accepted: 2019-11-20T19:58:07Z Publisher: SAGE
Citation
de Peuter, G., & Young, C. J. (2019). Contested Formations of Digital Game Labor. Television & New Media, 20(8), 747–755. https://doi.org/10.1177/1527476419851089