PLAYABLE THEATRE: ON GAMING AND AESTHETIC CONTROL

Date: 

Tuesday, March 23, 2021, 5:00pm

Location: 

Zoom Meeting


TRANSMEDIA ARTS

SPEAKER: LAWRENCE SWITZKY, UNIVERSITY OF TORONTO

Discussions of the remediation of video games in theatre often adopt a language of enhanced agency: greater choice, participation, openness, recasting the spectator as a player. But the procedural orientation of gaming also imposes significant constraints, both in terms of explicit rule sets and occluded controls. This talk will combine interviews with artists and case studies to examine the conflicting ideological and dramaturgical functions of digital games within theatre, and to propose that the “minimal gameplay” movement is a more accurate model for the marriage of gaming and theatre than “open-world games” or “environmental storytelling."

Lawrence Switzky is an Associate Professor of English and Drama at the University of Toronto. Since July he has been the editor of Modern Drama, the most prominent journal in English to focus on dramatic literature. His most recent publication is Shakespeare’s Things (Routledge, 2019), a collection of essays on the non-human actors in Shakespeare’s plays. He has taught and written about video games among the other media and is a participant in a SSHRC-funded research project on the intersection of theatre and gaming, “Scaling Liveness."

This event is co-sponsored with metaLAB - https://metalabharvard.github.io/

Instructions how to join the event:

1. Have a Zoom account. Members of the Harvard community who have not yet set up their Zoom account can follow the instructions provided by Harvard to set up an account. Guests without a Zoom account can set up an account for free.

2. Please provide your name and email on the registration page to register to this event.

After registering, you should receive the confirmation link to your e-mail.  If you have any questions or difficulty, please contact Magda Romanska at magdaromanska@outlook.com