Historicizing video game series through fan art discourses

Authors

  • Jan Švelch Charles University in Prague
  • Tereza Krobová Charles University in Prague

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.3983/twc.2016.0786

Keywords:

Everyday history, Fan history, Historical discourse

Abstract

In this article, we argue that fannish histories should not be dismissed as mere nostalgia over past experiences of one's own media fandom. Instead they should be understood as complex narratives which combine various historical layers (personal, productional, fictional) and influence the future reception of and anticipation for sequels. They also shed light on the personal histories of fans, which are often juxtaposed with extratextual and fictional histories of a video game series. The subjective nature of these historical discourses is not to be seen as a constraint but as a feature of everyday history which points to the prominence of historicizing in fan cultures of video game series. These topics are examined in the selected multimodal material from the site DeviantArt consisting of fan art pieces, authorial captions, and respective comments inspired by two single-player video game series: Tomb Raider and Mass Effect.

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Published

2016-09-15

Issue

Section

Theory