Second Person: Role-Playing and Story in Games and Playable Media
Pat Harrigan and Noah Wardrip-Fruin, Editors
The MIT Press
February 2007
Games and other playable forms, from interactive fictions to improvisational theater, involve role playing and story--something played and something told. In Second Person, game designers, authors, artists, and scholars examine the different ways in which these two elements work together in tabletop role-playing games (RPGs), computer games, board games, card games, electronic literature, political simulations, locative media, massively multiplayer games, and other forms that invite and structure play.
Second Person--so called because in these games and playable media it is "you" who plays the roles, "you" for whom the story is being told--first considers tabletop games ranging from Dungeons & Dragons and other RPGs with an explicit social component to Kim Newman's Choose Your Own Adventure-style novel Life's Lottery and its more traditional author-reader interaction. Contributors then examine computer-based playable structures that are designed for solo interaction--for the singular "you"--including the mainstream hit Prince of Persia: The Sands of Time and the genre-defining independent production Façade. Finally, contributors look at the intersection of the social spaces of play and the real world, considering, among other topics, the virtual communities of such Massively Multiplayer Online Role Playing Games (MMORPGs) as World of Warcraft and the political uses of digital gaming and role-playing techniques (as in The Howard Dean for Iowa Game, the first U.S. presidential campaign game).
In engaging essays that range in tone from the informal to the technical, these writers offer a variety of approaches for the examination of an emerging field that includes works as diverse as George R.R. Martin's Wild Cards series and the classic Infocom game Planetfall.
Second Person features three complete tabletop role-playing games that demonstrate some of the variations possible in the form: in John Tynes's Puppetland, players take on the roles of puppets in a land ruled by the villainous Punch; Greg Costikyan's Bestial Acts imports the techniques of Bertolt Brecht's theater of alienation into a dark role-playing structure; and in James Wallis's The Extraordinary Adventures of Baron Munchausen, the gameplay revolves around spinning elaborate tales in the style of the famous raconteur.
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Wednesday, May 30, 2007
Friday, May 18, 2007
SOFTWARE STUDIES
ABOUT | SPONSORS | PEOPLE | PRESS
Software Studies Initiative has two labs in New York and San Diego:
Software Studies NYC location: The Graduate Center, CUNY, 365 Fifth Ave, New York. Built in 1906.
Software Studies NYC California location: Calit2, La Jolla, CA. Built in 2005.
About Software Studies Initiative
Español | Português
Google searches and Amazon recommendations, airline flight paths and traffic lights, email and your phone: our culture runs on software. How does software shape the world?
Software Studies is a new research paradigm in the humanities and media studies that emerged in the second part of 2000s. The very first book that has this term in its title was published by The MIT Press in June 2008 (Matthew Fuller, ed., Software Studies: A Lexicon). In August 2008 The MIT Press started Software Studies book series, with Matthew Fuller, Noah Wardrip-Fruin and Lev Manovich as editors:
"Software Studies" book series | MIT Press book series
Lev Manovich: Software Takes Command | Forhcoming from Bloomsbury Academic, 2013
SoftWhere 2008 | International workshop in Software Studies, UCSD, May 21-22, 5/2008
Software Studies at Calit2
The Software Studies Initiative was founded in 2007 to help the development of this field. We work to disseminate the broad vision of software studies. That is, we think of software as a layer that permeates all areas of contemporary societies. Therefore, if we want to understand contemporary techniques of control, communication, representation, simulation, analysis, decision-making, memory, vision, writing, and interaction, our analysis can't be complete until we consider this software layer. This is why we are convinced that “software studies” is necessary and we welcome you to join us in our projects and activities.
Software Studies Initiative UC San Diego is housed within the UCSD Division of the California Institute for Telecommunication and Information Technology (Calit2. The technical facilities, research labs and staff support for the research in digital media at Calit2 unmatched anywhere on the West Coast:
The projects and activities of the Software Studies Initiative are taking full advantage of our unique affiliation with Calit2. Calit2 is developing innovative cyberinfrastructure for the next paradigm of scientific research based on remote collaboration between teams of scientists, working with very large data sets, and access to state-of-the-art computing, storage, networking and display technologies. In our project we are exploring how these cyberinfrastructure tools can be used in humanities and social science research.
Software Studies and Cultural Analytics
How can the latest tools in data analysis and visualization be used in relation to cultural data? How can we take advantage of unprecedented amounts of cultural data available on the web to begin analyzing culture in new ways? How does computational analysis of these massive datasets can help us to develop new cultural theory for the 21st century global networked digital culture ?
Cultural Analytics is a new field (2007) provoked by these questions. We define cultural analytics as the use of computational methods for the analysis of massive cultural data sets and flows. But rather than simply borrowing existing techniques and software from the sciences and the industry, we also examining their underlying assumptions and conceptual foundations.
Understood in view of these questions, our research at Software Studies Initiative covers two complementary directions:
1) Study of software and cyberinfrastructure and their deployment in modern societies using approaches from humanities, cultural criticism, and social sciences.
2) Use software-based research methods and next generation cyberinfrastructrure tools and resources for the study of massive sets of visual cultural data, asking theoretical questions which are important for humanities.
Working with a visualization of one million images on 287 HIPerSpace display at Calit2.
SPONSORS
The Andrew Mellon Foundation
National Science Foundation (NSF)
NEH Office of Digital Humanities
Calit2 UCSD Division
CRCA
UCDARnet
UCHRI
National University of Singapore
If you are interested in engaging in internships, collaborative research with our group or sponsoring innovative research projects, please contact Dr. Lev Manovich, Director of Software Studies Initiative at manovich.lev@gmail.com.
PEOPLE
Members of Software Studies Initiative working with a visualization showing 128 short videos.
Software Studies Initiative has two labs in New York and San Diego:
Software Studies NYC location: The Graduate Center, CUNY, 365 Fifth Ave, New York. Built in 1906.
Software Studies NYC California location: Calit2, La Jolla, CA. Built in 2005.
About Software Studies Initiative
Español | Português
Google searches and Amazon recommendations, airline flight paths and traffic lights, email and your phone: our culture runs on software. How does software shape the world?
Software Studies is a new research paradigm in the humanities and media studies that emerged in the second part of 2000s. The very first book that has this term in its title was published by The MIT Press in June 2008 (Matthew Fuller, ed., Software Studies: A Lexicon). In August 2008 The MIT Press started Software Studies book series, with Matthew Fuller, Noah Wardrip-Fruin
"Software Studies" book series | MIT Press book series
Lev Manovich: Software Takes Command | Forhcoming from Bloomsbury Academic, 2013
SoftWhere 2008 | International workshop in Software Studies, UCSD, May 21-22, 5/2008
Software Studies at Calit2
The Software Studies Initiative was founded in 2007 to help the development of this field. We work to disseminate the broad vision of software studies. That is, we think of software as a layer that permeates all areas of contemporary societies. Therefore, if we want to understand contemporary techniques of control, communication, representation, simulation, analysis, decision-making, memory, vision, writing, and interaction, our analysis can't be complete until we consider this software layer. This is why we are convinced that “software studies” is necessary and we welcome you to join us in our projects and activities.
Software Studies Initiative UC San Diego is housed within the UCSD Division of the California Institute for Telecommunication and Information Technology (Calit2. The technical facilities, research labs and staff support for the research in digital media at Calit2 unmatched anywhere on the West Coast:
The projects and activities of the Software Studies Initiative are taking full advantage of our unique affiliation with Calit2. Calit2 is developing innovative cyberinfrastructure for the next paradigm of scientific research based on remote collaboration between teams of scientists, working with very large data sets, and access to state-of-the-art computing, storage, networking and display technologies. In our project we are exploring how these cyberinfrastructure tools can be used in humanities and social science research.
Software Studies and Cultural Analytics
How can the latest tools in data analysis and visualization be used in relation to cultural data? How can we take advantage of unprecedented amounts of cultural data available on the web to begin analyzing culture in new ways? How does computational analysis of these massive datasets can help us to develop new cultural theory for the 21st century global networked digital culture ?
Cultural Analytics is a new field (2007) provoked by these questions. We define cultural analytics as the use of computational methods for the analysis of massive cultural data sets and flows. But rather than simply borrowing existing techniques and software from the sciences and the industry, we also examining their underlying assumptions and conceptual foundations.
Understood in view of these questions, our research at Software Studies Initiative covers two complementary directions:
1) Study of software and cyberinfrastructure and their deployment in modern societies using approaches from humanities, cultural criticism, and social sciences.
2) Use software-based research methods and next generation cyberinfrastructrure tools and resources for the study of massive sets of visual cultural data, asking theoretical questions which are important for humanities.
Working with a visualization of one million images on 287 HIPerSpace display at Calit2.
SPONSORS
The Andrew Mellon Foundation
National Science Foundation (NSF)
NEH Office of Digital Humanities
Calit2 UCSD Division
CRCA
UCDARnet
UCHRI
National University of Singapore
If you are interested in engaging in internships, collaborative research with our group or sponsoring innovative research projects, please contact Dr. Lev Manovich, Director of Software Studies Initiative at manovich.lev@gmail.com.
PEOPLE
Faculty researchers
Lev Manovich: Director, Software Studies @ CALIT2; Professor, CUNY | |
Jeremy Douglass: Assistant Professor, English, UCSB | |
Cicero Inacio da Silva: Professor, Federal University of São Paulo (UNIFESP), Brazil |
Visiting fellows
Winter and Spring 2011: Jean-Francois Lucas: PhD candidate in Sociology, European University of Brittany, Rennes | |
Spring 2009: Tristan Thielmann: Assistant Professor in Media Studies at the Research Center "Media Upheavals", University of Siegen, Germany |
Post-doc researchers
Eduardo Navas: Postdoctoral Scholar, Information Science and Media Studies, University of Bergen, 2010-2012. | |
Jeremy Douglass: Postdoctoral Researcher, Software Studies, Calit2, 2007-2012. |
Graduate researchers, UCSD, 2007-2012
William Huber (Visual Arts) | |
Tara Zepel (Visual Arts) | |
So Yamaoka (Computer Science and Engineering) | |
Sunsern Cheamanunku (Computer Science and Engineering) | |
Chanda L. Carey (Visual Arts) | |
Daniel Rehn (Visual Arts) | |
Laura Hoeger (Visual Arts) | |
Stephen Mandiberg (Communication) | |
Rachel Cody (Sociology) | |
Hijoo Son (History, UCLA) |
Undergraduate researchers, UCSD, 2007-2012
Devon Merill (Independent Summer Internship -- "Exploring comics and manga through scripted image processing workflows." Summer 2009.) | |
Jia Gu (Calit2 Summer Undergraduate Researcher, UCSD -- "new software interfaces for image collections". Summer 2008.) | |
Agatha Man (Calit2 Summer Undergraduate Researcher, UCSD -- "analyses of MMO games". Summer 2008.) | |
Nichol Bernardo (Undergraduate intern, UCSD -- "Cultural Analytics". Summer 2008. | |
Bob Li (Undergraduate Graphic Designer. Summer 2008.) | |
Kedar Reddy (Calit2 summer 2009 undergraduate fellow) | |
Christa Lee (Fall 2008 independent study - arthistory.viz) | |
Victoria Azurin (Undergraduate intern, UCSD -- "Cultural Analytics - visual culture applications". Summer 2009; Manga project - summer 2010) | |
Xiaoda Wang (Undergraduate intern, UCSD -- "Cultural Analytics - art history applications". Summer 2009.) | |
Nadia Xiangfei Zeng (Undergraduate researcher, UCSD -- Manga project; gallery@calit2 Software Studies exhibition; visualization software. Summer 2010.) |
Faculty Collaborators, UCSD, 2007-2012
- Noah Wardrip-Fruin:Associte Professor, Computer Science, UCSC (co-founder of Software Studies Initiative)
- Kay O'Halloran, Multimondal Analysis Lab, NUS (cultural analytics)
- Cinemetrics: a research group comprising leading film scholars (film analysis)
- David Kirsh, Cognitive Science, UCSD (dance video analysis)
- Digital Formalism project: Department for Theatre, Film and Media Studies (TFM), Vienna University; the Austrian Film Museum; Interactive Media Systems Group, Vienna University of Technology (film analysis)
- Isabel Galhano Rodrigues, University of Porto, Portugald (gesture analysis)
- Jim Hollan, Cognitive Science, UCSD (UCSD Collaboratory Grant - development of Cultural Analytics software)
- Falko Kuester, Structural Engineering (UCSD Collaboratory Grant - development of Cultural Analytics software)
- National University of Singapore (4 faculty from different departments - application of Cultural Analytics methods and techniques to the analysis of Asian cultures)
- Matthew Fuller, Goldsmiths College, University of London (Software Studies)
Members of Software Studies Initiative working with a visualization showing 128 short videos.
PRESS
Manovich and Cultural analytics research in The Chronicle for Higher Education
Cultural analytics research in NEH Humanities magazine
About our exhibition SHAPING TIME at Graphic Design Museum (Breda, ND)
Software Studies work with National Energy Research Scientific Computing Center
Expressive Processing by Noah Wardrip-Fruin
Lev Manovich 's workshop @ FILE Labo 2009
Cultural analytics coverage in Singapore and UAE
A Computing Science Approach For Analyzing Culture (www.supercomputingonline.com)
Software Studies in Chronicle of Higher Education
Calit2 article about our Humanities High-Performance Computing grant
Lev Manovich is interviewed about Cultural Analytics for BBC World Service "Digital Planet" show
Visualizing Cultural Patterns in N Art Magazine
Cultural Analytics in voiceofsandiego.org article
Cultural Analytics @ ISEA 2008
HPCwire article about Cultural Analytics
Game Libratory featured on NotCot
"Visualizing Cultural Patterns" featured in UCSD/Calit2 article
SoftWhere '08 press release and article in San Diego Business Journal
UC San Diego New-Media Expert Pushes Peer Review into the 21st Century
A era da infoestética
Manovich and Cultural analytics research in The Chronicle for Higher Education
Cultural analytics research in NEH Humanities magazine
About our exhibition SHAPING TIME at Graphic Design Museum (Breda, ND)
Software Studies work with National Energy Research Scientific Computing Center
Expressive Processing by Noah Wardrip-Fruin
Lev Manovich 's workshop @ FILE Labo 2009
Cultural analytics coverage in Singapore and UAE
A Computing Science Approach For Analyzing Culture (www.supercomputingonline.com)
Software Studies in Chronicle of Higher Education
Calit2 article about our Humanities High-Performance Computing grant
Lev Manovich is interviewed about Cultural Analytics for BBC World Service "Digital Planet" show
Visualizing Cultural Patterns in N Art Magazine
Cultural Analytics in voiceofsandiego.org article
Cultural Analytics @ ISEA 2008
HPCwire article about Cultural Analytics
Game Libratory featured on NotCot
"Visualizing Cultural Patterns" featured in UCSD/Calit2 article
SoftWhere '08 press release and article in San Diego Business Journal
UC San Diego New-Media Expert Pushes Peer Review into the 21st Century
A era da infoestética
Thursday, May 17, 2007
CLOSED | Postdoc Opening in Software Studies @ UCSD
POSTDOCTORAL RESEARCHER POSITION
University of California, San Diego (UCSD)
UPDATE: This position is now closed. A candidate was selected on 8/17/07 to begin in Fall 2007. Thanks to all applicants for your interest and best wishes in future career pursuits.
We are currently recruiting for a Postdoctoral Researcher to join a new Software Studies initiative at UCSD. The researcher will work with Dr. Lev Manovich (Professor, Visual Arts) and Dr. Noah Wardrip-Fruin (Assistant Professor, Communication) and will play a key role in research and field-building activities.
The goals of Software Studies initiative at UCSD are:
POSITION DETAILS
The position is full time (40 hrs/week). The initial appointment is for 1 year, with the possibility for renewal. The position comes with full benefits covered by UCSD (http://research.ucsd.edu/postdoc/benefits.aspx). The starting salary range is USD 38,000 - 42,000. The selected candidate can start immediately.
Required qualifications:
Desired qualifications:
This position is supported by the UCSD Division of the California Institute for Telecommunications and Information Technology (Calit2), and the Center for Research in Computing and the Arts (CRCA). Housing over 900 faculty, graduate student, and staff researchers, Calit2 is developing next-generation cyberinfrastructure tools with a particular focus on multidisciplinary collaboration. Calit2 is located on UCSD campus, which is internationally renowned as a place for study and research in digital art, computer music, and digital theory. Between the departments of Visual Arts, Music, and Communication, there are close to 30 full-time faculty working in these areas. The technical facilities and staff support for the research in digital media on the UCSD campus are among the best in the world. They include a number of state-of-the-art research labs and performance spaces which provide both current and next-generation tools for immersive visualization, multi-channel audio spatialization, digital cinema, motion capture, interactive performance, 3-D fabrication, and computer gaming research.
The position is open until filled, but we will begin reviewing applications June 10th, 2007. For priority consideration, candidates are encouraged to apply before this date. Applicants should send a current CV with cover letter to Helena Bristow (bristow@ucsd.edu) with subject line "Application for Software Studies Postdoc Position."
Manovich and Wardrip-Fruin will be available for preliminary interviews at the 2007 Digital Humanities conference during the first week of June, 2007 (http://www.digitalhumanities.org/dh2007/). Please indicate whether you will be attending DH '07 in your application.
For further information, please contact:
Helena Bristow
Administrative Manager
Center for Research in Computing and the Arts
bristow@ucsd.edu
University of California, San Diego (UCSD)
UPDATE: This position is now closed. A candidate was selected on 8/17/07 to begin in Fall 2007. Thanks to all applicants for your interest and best wishes in future career pursuits.
We are currently recruiting for a Postdoctoral Researcher to join a new Software Studies initiative at UCSD. The researcher will work with Dr. Lev Manovich (Professor, Visual Arts) and Dr. Noah Wardrip-Fruin (Assistant Professor, Communication) and will play a key role in research and field-building activities.
The goals of Software Studies initiative at UCSD are:
- to foster research and develop models and tools for the study of software from the perspectives of cultural criticism, humanities, and social sciences
- to help establish the new field of "software studies" which will complement existing research in cyberculture and new media; and
- to investigate how next generation cyberinfrastructure technologies can be used by humanists, social scientists, and cultural practitioners
POSITION DETAILS
The position is full time (40 hrs/week). The initial appointment is for 1 year, with the possibility for renewal. The position comes with full benefits covered by UCSD (http://research.ucsd.edu/postdoc/benefits.aspx). The starting salary range is USD 38,000 - 42,000. The selected candidate can start immediately.
Required qualifications:
- a PhD in the humanities, social sciences, information science, or related interdisciplinary area which is completed and defended before starting the position at UCSD;
- broad understanding of contemporary global culture and familiarity with current debates in one or more cultural fields;
- familiarity with current IT developments, and understanding of Web 2.0 concepts and social media optimization; and
- the ability to write engaging and jargon-free texts that are accessible to diverse global audiences
Desired qualifications:
- experience installing and using research-oriented software tools (e.g., data mining tools, GIS packages, visualization technologies, databases, and/or other software used in digital humanities);
- understanding of programming language and system integration concepts; some practical experience with computer programming or scripting;
- previous experience working with computer scientists on joint projects; and
- previous research projects and/or publications which address software from the perspectives of the humanities, social sciences, or cultural criticism (for example: the history of software forms, work practices shaped by software infrastructures, studies of software operations and/or code).
This position is supported by the UCSD Division of the California Institute for Telecommunications and Information Technology (Calit2), and the Center for Research in Computing and the Arts (CRCA). Housing over 900 faculty, graduate student, and staff researchers, Calit2 is developing next-generation cyberinfrastructure tools with a particular focus on multidisciplinary collaboration. Calit2 is located on UCSD campus, which is internationally renowned as a place for study and research in digital art, computer music, and digital theory. Between the departments of Visual Arts, Music, and Communication, there are close to 30 full-time faculty working in these areas. The technical facilities and staff support for the research in digital media on the UCSD campus are among the best in the world. They include a number of state-of-the-art research labs and performance spaces which provide both current and next-generation tools for immersive visualization, multi-channel audio spatialization, digital cinema, motion capture, interactive performance, 3-D fabrication, and computer gaming research.
The position is open until filled, but we will begin reviewing applications June 10th, 2007. For priority consideration, candidates are encouraged to apply before this date. Applicants should send a current CV with cover letter to Helena Bristow (bristow@ucsd.edu) with subject line "Application for Software Studies Postdoc Position."
Manovich and Wardrip-Fruin will be available for preliminary interviews at the 2007 Digital Humanities conference during the first week of June, 2007 (http://www.digitalhumanities.org/dh2007/). Please indicate whether you will be attending DH '07 in your application.
For further information, please contact:
Helena Bristow
Administrative Manager
Center for Research in Computing and the Arts
bristow@ucsd.edu
Tuesday, May 15, 2007
PEOPLE | Software Studies Initiative
Lev Manovich: Director, Software Studies @ UCSD; Professor, Visual Arts | |
Noah Wardrip-Fruin: Associate Director, Software Studies @UCSD; Assistant Professor, Computer Science, UCSC | |
Jeremy Douglass: Postdoctoral Researcher, Software Studies @ UCSD | |
- Sheldon Brown: Professor, Visual Arts; Director, CRCA; Director, Experimental GameLab
- Shlomo Dubnov: Associate Professor, Music
- Amy Alexander: Associate Professor, Visual Arts
- Jim Hollan: Professor, Cognitive Science; Co-Director, Distributed Cognition & HCI Laboratory
- Stefan Tanaka: Professor, History
- Geoff Voelker: Associate Professor, Computer Science & Engineering
- Kelly A. Gates: Assistant Professor, Communication
- Barry Brown: Associate Professor, Communication
- James Fowler Associate Professor, Political Science
- Kyong Park Associate Professor, Visual Arts
- Falko Kuester Associate Professor, Structural Engineering
AFFILIATES
- Benjamin H. Bratton: Director of the Advanced Strategies Group, Yahoo!, Santa Monica, CA
- Matthew Fuller: Reader, Convenor of MA Cultural Studies & MA Culture Industry, Goldsmiths College, London University; Editor, ‘Software Studies, a lexicon’ MIT Press, 2007
- Scott Lash: Professor of Sociology; Director, Centre for Cultural Studies, Goldsmiths College, London University
Cicero Silva, Software Studies Initiative @ FILE Labo, Brazil
VISITING FELLOWS
SPRING 2008
RESEARCHERS
SUMMER 2008
SPRING 2008
Tristan Thielmann: Assistant Professor in Media Studies at the Research Center "Media Upheavals", University of Siegen, Germany |
RESEARCHERS
SUMMER 2008
Software Studies meeting at CRCA. From left to right: Noah Wardrip-Fruin, Helena Bristow, Jeremy Douglass, Lev Manovich, Tristan Thielmann. |
Relevant Links
Software Studies Publications
A History of the Software Industry
Adobe Systems
The Birth of Software Studies
Conference on History of Computing: Software Issues
Essays on the Culture of Software
First Person: New Media as Story, Performance, and Game
The New Media Reader
Second Person: Role-Playing and Story in Games and Playable Media
Small Tech: The Culture of Digital Tools
Software History Bibliography
Software Studies
Software Studies Workshop
Unit Operations
Related Academic Initiatives
CIS, Harvard
CIS, Stanford
Digital Media & Learning, MacArthur
Digital Youth Research, Berkeley
Future of the Book
Grand Text Auto
IATH, Virginia
MITH, Maryland
Network Cultures, Amsterdam
Software History
Srishti
FILE Labo
Cultural Software: Trend Analysis
Google Trends
Google Trends: Music
TED: Ideas worth spreading
Trend Watching
Data Culture
Future Feeder
We Feel Fine
A History of the Software Industry
Adobe Systems
The Birth of Software Studies
Conference on History of Computing: Software Issues
Essays on the Culture of Software
First Person: New Media as Story, Performance, and Game
The New Media Reader
Second Person: Role-Playing and Story in Games and Playable Media
Small Tech: The Culture of Digital Tools
Software History Bibliography
Software Studies
Software Studies Workshop
Unit Operations
Related Academic Initiatives
CIS, Harvard
CIS, Stanford
Digital Media & Learning, MacArthur
Digital Youth Research, Berkeley
Future of the Book
Grand Text Auto
IATH, Virginia
MITH, Maryland
Network Cultures, Amsterdam
Software History
Srishti
FILE Labo
Cultural Software: Trend Analysis
Google Trends
Google Trends: Music
TED: Ideas worth spreading
Trend Watching
Data Culture
Future Feeder
We Feel Fine
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