For those interesting in online gaming and identities, I can recommend you
to download an interesting dissertation at
http://www.hivolda.no/attachments/site/group23/tm_thesis.pdf (1.65 MB file).
It was written by Torill Mortensen and is called "Pleasures of the Player:
Flow and Control in Online Games".
Patrik
-----Ursprungligt meddelande-----
Från: xmca-bounces@weber.ucsd.edu [mailto:xmca-bounces@weber.ucsd.edu] För
Polin, Linda
Skickat: den 7 mars 2006 07:12
Till: eXtended Mind, Culture, Activity
Ämne: Re: [xmca] virtual realities - liberation
I guess I'm not sure people are trying on alternative identities as
much as they are, perhaps, experiencing a kind of liberation of
identity in a space that is less sharply defined by personal
sociocultural history, as Mark Jackson and Constance Steinkuhler have
said, albeit differently. Maybe that's the draw. We are similar and
different in ways that have no meaning outside the game.
That's why I suggested it wasn't so much a virtual reality, which
focuses us on the literal material interpretation, but an alternate
reality. An awful lot is still real but the setting has changed. In
that distinction, I wonder about the design that makes this a
different sort of place to be, and be with others, and do work and
play activities.
Lindax
On Mar 6, 2006, at 3:19 PM, Constance Steinkuehler wrote:
> Some of my work on cognition & learning in massively multiplayer
> online games is also relevant here: http://
> website.education.wisc.edu/steinkuehler/
>
>> Gee's study of "projective identities" in video gaming is relevant
>> to this discussion--one of his students (graduating soon), Rebecca
>> Black, is also completing a dissertation that looks at identity
>> construction through fanfiction sites. p
>> At 05:18 PM 3/6/2006 -0500, you wrote:
>>> As a technology instructor in an inner-city school district with
>>> over 90% of
>>> the student population qualifying for Title I funds, I have been
>>> fascinated
>>> while observing students utilizing online communities
>>> (myspace.com) as
>>> environments to create "alternative" identities. Students that we
>>> would
>>> often think of as "at-risk" in traditional education vernacular,
>>> take on new
>>> identities in these environments and role play with fellow-cyber
>>> travelers
>>> without the baggage usually associated with persons laden with
>>> generations
>>> of poverty. While the street language pervades the dialogue, one
>>> would be
>>> challenged to differentiate those participants from the various
>>> "social
>>> classes". A new social reality with classless identities seems to
>>> be under
>>> construction in this not so artificial virtual world.
>>>
>>> I think it well worth research to explore behavior in these
>>> environments. I
>>> further think CHAT provides an exciting perspective from which to
>>> conduct
>>> that exploration.
>>>
>>> Mark
>>> ----- Original Message -----
>>> From: "Russell, Donna L" <russelldl@umkc.edu>
>>> To: <xmca@weber.ucsd.edu>
>>> Sent: Monday, March 06, 2006 4:10 PM
>>> Subject: [xmca] virtual realities
>>>
>>>
>>> hello linda
>>>
>>> i think that 'reality' virtual or otherwise deals with the
>>> authenticity of
>>> your responses (as in how your responses are validated by
>>> consequences in
>>> the context) i think virtual realities such as you describe will
>>> become more
>>> involving as the quality of the human computer interface develops
>>>
>>> language has been our gauge and response to reality and children's
>>> development is monitored by the development of language memes-
>>> with emerging
>>> technologies technology memes are created to gauge development
>>> and resultant
>>> authenticity to virtual realities. i believe in the future
>>> virtual realities
>>> will include not a rough interface between the human and digitial
>>> 'reality' -- rather there will be a meme bot that contains your
>>> aspects of
>>> your understandings and knowledge that will make the engagement
>>> more 'real'
>>> and more authentic-
>>>
>>> in the future these virtual representations will interact as
>>> information
>>> assistants, virtual coaches, virtual sales clerks, virtual
>>> entertainers, and
>>> virtual instructors. i am part of the virtual instructors pilot
>>> research
>>> group which is looking at research in the development of these
>>> virtual
>>> humans- i am interested in the design of learning environments
>>> using these
>>> virtual humans and the kinds and qualities of learning that are
>>> potentially
>>> available in these 'realities'
>>>
>>> donna
>>>
>>> Donna L. Russell, Ph.D.
>>> Assistant Professor
>>> Instructional Technology
>>> Curriculum and Instructional Leadership
>>> Suite 309
>>> School of Education
>>> University of Missouri-Kansas City
>>> Kansas City, MO 64110
>>> (cell) 314.210.6996
>>> (office) 816.235.5871
>>> russelldl@umkc.edu
>>> http://r.web.umkc.edu/russelldl/
>>> ----- Original Message -----
>>> From: "Polin, Linda" <Linda.Polin@pepperdine.edu>
>>> To: "eXtended Mind, Culture, Activity" <xmca@weber.ucsd.edu>
>>> Sent: Monday, March 06, 2006 12:29 AM
>>> Subject: Re: [xmca] Experience: material, ideal, real, imagined
>>> in MMOGs
>>>
>>>> Hi Mike and X'ers,
>>>>
>>>> I am both playing in and writing about an MMOG at the moment,
>>>> with a
>>>> group of doctoral students who are no doubt lurking on this list.
>>>>
>>>> I'm playing in World of Warcraft (or World of Warcrack, as it is
>>>> often called for good reason). I am very interested in the way in
>>>> which the designers have shaped interaction and play, with
>>>> regard to
>>>> both the client interface for playing, and the sociocultural
>>>> structures around tasks and interactions in the game play. [I'm
>>>> also
>>> > playing in Second Life, but that is a very different creature.]
>>>>
>>>> In WoW, I've played alongside 12 year olds and old farts like
>>>> myself;
>>>> college kids complaining about the bandwidth in the dorms, and
>>>> mommies who periodically have to go AFK BRB (away from
>>>> keyboard; be
>>>> right back) to change a diaper. So far none offers any evidence of
>>>> confusing what you are calling reality and fantasy, although
>>>> almost
>>>> all have remarked on one occasion or another about the immersive
>>>> power of the world to 'wow' them (pun intended) and engage them
>>>> deeply. Everyone who plays has a story about losing track of
>>>> time in
>>>> significant ways. That is immersion. And I think Michelle's
>>>> remarks
>>>> with regard to "flow" come the closest to describing what is
>>>> going on.
>>>>
>>>> Is it material? Because there is an economic system in play, and
>>>> objects of desire, there is real work happening, and I am NOT
>>>> referencing only the "gold farmers" in China using game
>>>> characters to
>>>> gather game gold to be sold for real money to players who want an
>>>> easy way to get ahead in the game but lack the time or tenacity
>>>> to do
>>>> the grind work. There are also in-game activities analogous to
>>>> real
>>>> work and real world life.
>>>>
>>>> Real work: For instance, the guildmaster of my guild is a day
>>>> trader
>>>> who spends a lot of time working the Auction House (in-game
>>>> EBay kind
>>>> of thing) to make the game money he needs to support his
>>>> character's
>>>> needs (e.g., trick out his ride, in this case a white tiger).
>>>> There
>>>> are guilds that players belong to, which function as both
>>>> family and
>>>> school in a way reminiscent of the Brazilian "Samba schools"
>>>> Seymour
>>>> Papert described. Here though, instead of preparing for Mardi Gras
>>>> competitions with other Samba Schools and having fun, it's about
>>>> preparing for competitions with other players and having fun.
>>>>
>>>> Real play (within play): For instance, at the recent Winter Veil
>>>> Festival I got to drink strong ale, and after two drinks, my
>>>> screen
>>>> was a bit blurry. After three drinks, it was significantly
>>>> worse and
>>>> my mouse actions were less accurate. I was drunk, albeit virtually
>>>> so, and my game play was impaired.
>>>>
>>>> I would propose that, within the game world, these analogous
>>>> elements
>>>> make it a KIND of real world, rather than a fantasy world.
>>>> There is a
>>>> very real, game-specific culture that players rely upon to make
>>>> their
>>>> way in that world. There are real relationships, real
>>>> traditions and
>>>> ways of being in the world, real identity markers, divisions of
>>>> labor
>>>> and opportunities for collaboration, sub-cultures, mediational
>>>> objects with embedded histories that support new learners, etc etc
>>>> etc. WoW is fascinating to me because it is NOT a blurring of
>>>> reality; it is an ALTERNATE (not alternative) reality, an
>>>> alternate
>>>> real culture. By virtue of having a discernible culture, is it
>>>> not real?
>>>>
>>>> There is an immense amount of material to talk about here, but
>>>> this
>>>> is an interesting turn on XMCA and I'm hoping we'll have some
>>>> 'time'
>>>> to discuss more. I'd point you to our blog on this, but it's
>>>> not yet
>>>> ready for prime time consumption.
>>>>
>>>> Why must we refer to reality as if there were only one
>>>> possible? =grin=
>>>>
>>>> Lindax
>>>> (aka Hallgrima, a level 44 Gnome Warlock)
>>>>
>>>>
>>>> Linda Polin, PhD
>>>> Davidson Professor of Education and Technology
>>>> Director, EdD in Educational Technology
>>>> 310-568-5641; Skype: profpolin
>>>> gsep.pepperdine.edu/~lpolin
>>>>
>>>>
>>>>
>>>>
>>>> On Mar 5, 2006, at 4:07 PM, Mike Cole wrote:
>>>>>>
>>>>>> In various situations (in particular, I am thinking of various
>>>>>> massive
>>>>>> multi-user games and related cyber-interactional meeting places)
>>>>>> it appears that people can, perhaps cannot help at times,
>>>>>> confusing what
>>>>>> we
>>>>>> would normally refer to as "fantasy" and "reality."
>>>>>>
>>>>>> There is an extensive literature on the development of this
>>>>>> distinction in
>>>>>> children's development, but I am seeking research on the
>>>>>> distinction's presumed presence or absence among adults.
>>>>>>
>>>>>> Any and all help appreciated
>>>>>> mike
>>>>>> _______________________________________________
>>>>>> xmca mailing list
>>>>>> xmca@weber.ucsd.edu
>>> >>> http://dss.ucsd.edu/mailman/listinfo/xmca
>>>>>>
>>>>>> Andy Blunden, for Victorian Peace Network
>>>>>> Global Justice Tours: http://ethicalpolitics.org
>>>>>>
>>>>>>
>>>>> _______________________________________________
>>>>> xmca mailing list
>>>>> xmca@weber.ucsd.edu
>>>>> http://dss.ucsd.edu/mailman/listinfo/xmca
>>>> _______________________________________________
>>>> xmca mailing list
>>>> xmca@weber.ucsd.edu
>>>> http://dss.ucsd.edu/mailman/listinfo/xmca
>>>
>>> Donna L. Russell, Ph.D.
>>> Assistant Professor
>>> Instructional Technology
>>> Curriculum and Instructional Leadership
>>> School of Education
>>> University of Missouri-Kansas City
>>> (email) russelldl@umkc.edu <mailto:russelldl@umkc.edu>
>>> (website) http://r.web.umkc.edu/russelldl/
>>> <http://r.web.umkc.edu/russelldl>
>>> (cell) 314.210.6996
>>> _______________________________________________
>>> xmca mailing list
>>> xmca@weber.ucsd.edu
>>> http://dss.ucsd.edu/mailman/listinfo/xmca
>>>
>>>
>>> _______________________________________________
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>>
>>
>> _______________________________________________
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>> http://dss.ucsd.edu/mailman/listinfo/xmca
>
>
> --
> Constance A. Steinkuehler
> Assistant Professor, Curriculum & Instruction
> University of Wisconsin - Madison
> http://www.constances.org
> _______________________________________________
> xmca mailing list
> xmca@weber.ucsd.edu
> http://dss.ucsd.edu/mailman/listinfo/xmca
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