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Sustainable Play: Towards a New Games Movement for the Digital Age

Pearce, Celia, Tracy Fullerton, Janine Fron, Jacqueline Ford Morie, “Sustainable Play: Towards a New Games Movement for the Digital Age.” Digital Arts and Culture Conference Proceedings, December 2006. IT University of Copenhagen, Denmark.

ABSTRACT:
This paper suggests a revisitation of the New Games Movement, formed by Stewart Brand and others in the early 1970s in the United States as a response to the Vietnam War, against a backdrop of dramatic social and economic change, fueled by a looming energy crisis, civil rights, feminism, and unhealthy widespread drug abuse. Like-minded contemporaries, R. Buckminster Fuller (World Game), Robert Smithson (Spiral Jetty), and Christo and Jean-Claude (Valley Curtain), responded in kind to these environmental and sociopolitical quandaries with their "earthworks." As digital game designers and theorists embark upon developing new methods to address the creative crisis in mainstream game production, against a similar backdrop of climate change, a controversial war, political upheaval and complex gender issues, we propose a reexamination of the New Games Movement and its methods as a means of constructing shared contexts for meaningful play in virtual and real-world spaces.

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