Education

Even Video Games Haven’t Escaped The Clutches Of Activist Professors

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Professors at multiple universities discussed weaving politics into video game courses on Twitter Tuesday and Wednesday.

They based their conversation around a video published by journalist Marijam Didzgalvyte, who has written for video game blog Kotaku, which used to be owned by Gawker Media.

“I was alarmed to discover that the historical, sociological and political teachings are a rarity to be part of the curriculum,” Didzgalvyte said. “The [game] industry’s historical sexism, ties with the Western military industrial complex, the rise of games as objects of political propaganda, GamerGate, the human cost of hardware production, industry-labor relations, gamification as a reinvention of late-phase capitalism, material labor.”

The journalist referred to #GamerGate, the consumer revolt against censorship of video games and poor ethics in the video game industry, and said that Milo Yiannopoulos and Steve Bannon are only able to use gamers as a “swarm for their political needs because us progressives are investing so little time nurturing critical thought in the field.”

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Marshall University professor Jess Morrissette described a course called “Politics and Video Games,” which he is hoping to introduce to the West Virginia school in spring 2019.

“My approach is to examine: 1) games about politics, 2) political themes (e.g. race, gender, class, etc.) in games that aren’t explicitly “about” politics, and 3) the politics of the video game industry and gaming culture,” Morrissette tweeted.