A defining fixture of our contemporary world, video games offer a rich spectrum of engagements with the past. Beyond a source of entertainment, video games are cultural expressions that support and influence social interactions. Games educate, bring enjoyment, and encourage reflection. They are intricate achievements of coding and creative works of art. Histories, ranging from the personal to the global, are reinterpreted and retold for broad audiences in playful, digital experiences. The medium also magnifies our already complicated and confrontational relation with the past, for instance through its overreliance on violent and discriminatory game mechanics. This book continues an interdisciplinary conversation on game development and play, working towards a better understanding of how we represent and experience the past in the present.Return to the Interactive Past offers a new collection of engaging writings by game creators, historians, computer scientists, archaeologists, and others. It shows us the thoughtful processes developers go through when they design games, as well as the complex ways in which players interact with games. Building on the themes explored in the book The Interactive Past, the authors go back to the past to raise new issues. How can you sensitively and evocatively use veterans' voices to make a video game that is not about combat? How can the development of an old video game be reconstructed on the basis of its code and historic hardware limitations? Could hacking be a way to decolonize games and counter harmful stereotypes? When archaeologists study games, what kinds of maps do they draw for their digital fieldwork? And in which ways could we teach history through playing games and game-making?Contents1. IntroductionAngus A.A. Mol, Aris Politopoulos, Csilla E. Ariese, Bram van den Hout and Krijn H.J. BoomPart I: Narratives in and of Video Games2. The Role of Historical Research and 'Historical Accuracy' in Where the Water Tastes Like WineJohnnemann Nordhagen3. Their Memory: Exploring Veterans' VoicesIain Donald, Emma Houghton and Kenneth Scott-Brown4. The Desolation of VixensJohn Aycock and Hayden Kroepfl5. The Final Word? How Fans of The Elder Scrolls Record, Archive, and Interpret the Battle of Red MountainDennis JansenPart II: Representations and Intersectionality in Video Games6. Personal and Social Recent History in Fragments of Him: Defining and Exploring 'Immersion' in Video GamesMata Haggis-Burridge7. 'Transcending History and the World': Ancient Greece and Rome in Versus Fighting Video GamesDunstan Lowe8. Synthetic Spaces and Indigenous Identity: Decolonizing Video Games and Reclaiming RepresentationAshlee Bird9. Fork in the Road: Consuming and Producing Video Game CartographiesFlorence Smith NichollsPart III: Historical Research and Learning through Video Games10. Scholarly History through Digital Games: Pedagogical Practice as Research MethodRobert Houghton11. Life Was Really Hard! Designingand Using Digital Games to Explore Medieval Life in Primary SchoolsJuan Hiriart12. Gaming the Past: Video Games and Historical Literacy in the College ClassroomJeffrey Lawler and Sean Smith13. Of Ecosystems and Landscapes: An Essay on Grasping Themes of Environmental History in Video GamesGeorge L. Vlachos14. Stories Around the CampfireThe Interactive Past Community (Curated by Csilla E. Ariese)
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