Games and Grog, once a month

Jesper Juul speaking at MIT

Posted under Event announcements - Nov 21st, 06
November 28, 2006
5:00 pmto7:00 pm

Please join the MIT Comparative Media Studies Program and the New Media Literacies Project in welcoming Professor Jesper Juul back to campus:

Half-Real: A Video Game in the Hands of a Player

A Lecture by Jesper Juul

November 28th, 2006

5-7pm

Room 1-136

MIT Campus

Free and open to the public

Description of the talk:

What happens when a player picks up video game, learns to play it, masters it, and leaves it? Using concepts from my book on video games, Half-Real: Video Games between Real Rules and Fictional Worlds, I will argue that video game players are neither rational solvers of abstract problems, nor daydreamers in fictional worlds, but both of these things with shifting emphasis. The unique quality of video games is to be located in their intricate interplay of rules and fictions, which I will examine across genres, from casual games to massively multiplayer games.

Bio:

Jesper Juul is a video game theorist and assistant professor in video game theory and design at the Centre for Computer Game Research Copenhagen where he also earned his Ph.D. His book Half-Real on video game theory was published by MIT Press in 2005.
Additionally, he works as a multi-user chat systems and casual game developer. He is currently a visiting scholar at Parsons School of Design in New York.

Website: www.jesperjuul.net
Book: www.half-real.net
Blog: www.jesperjuul.net/ludologist

This lecture is sponsored by the Comparative Media Studies Program (http://cms.mit.edu ) and the New Media Literacies Project ( http://projectnml.org).

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