The Race Card : From Gaming Technologies to Model Minorities / Tara Fickle.
Material type:
TextSeries: Postmillennial Pop ; 22Publisher: New York, NY : New York University Press, [2019]Copyright date: ©2019Description: 1 online resource : 23 black and white illustrationsContent type: - 9781479868551
- 9781479805686
- Asian Americans in popular culture
- Asian Americans -- Social conditions
- Game theory -- Social aspects -- United States
- Games -- Social aspects -- United States
- Race discrimination -- United States
- SOCIAL SCIENCE / Media Studies
- Aiiieeeee
- Andas game
- Asian American
- Asian immigration
- Bret Harte
- C Wright Mills
- Chinese Exclusion Act
- Chinese labor
- Cory Doctorow
- DSM
- GPS
- Heathen Chinee
- Hiroshi Nakamura
- Hisaye Yamamoto
- Homo Ludens
- Jacques Derrida
- Jacques Ehrmann
- Japanese American
- Jen Wang
- Johan Huizinga
- John Okada
- Man Play and Games
- Milton Murayama
- Nintendo
- Orientalism
- Pokemon
- Pokémon GO
- RAND
- Roger Caillois
- The Wasp
- Wakako Yamauchi
- augmented reality
- class inequality
- critical race studies
- ethnic American literature
- euchre
- freemium
- gambling
- game addiction
- game studies
- game theory
- games of chance
- gamification
- globalization
- gold farming
- gold mining
- imperial Japan
- inscrutability
- intentional fallacy
- internet addiction
- internment
- literary interpretation
- ludo-Orientalism
- mapping
- meritocracy
- mobile games
- neoliberalism
- racialization
- social mobility
- structuralism
- techno-Orientalism
- video games
- yellow peril
- 305.895073 23
- E184.A75 F45 2020
- online - DeGruyter
| Item type | Current library | Call number | URL | Status | Notes | Barcode | |
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eBook
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Biblioteca "Angelicum" Pont. Univ. S.Tommaso d'Aquino Nuvola online | online - DeGruyter (Browse shelf(Opens below)) | Online access | Not for loan (Accesso limitato) | Accesso per gli utenti autorizzati / Access for authorized users | (dgr)9781479805686 |
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| online - DeGruyter Youth Activism in an Era of Education Inequality / | online - DeGruyter Feminists Rethink the Neoliberal State : Inequality, Exclusion, and Change / | online - DeGruyter Reproductive Injustice : Racism, Pregnancy, and Premature Birth / | online - DeGruyter The Race Card : From Gaming Technologies to Model Minorities / | online - DeGruyter America and the Making of an Independent Ireland : A History / | online - DeGruyter Spaces of Security : Ethnographies of Securityscapes, Surveillance, and Control / | online - DeGruyter Clipped Wings : The Rise and Fall of the Women Airforce Service Pilots (WASPs) of World War II / |
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How games have been used to establish and combat Asian American racial stereotypes As Pokémon Go reshaped our neighborhood geographies and the human flows of our cities, mapping the virtual onto lived realities, so too has gaming and game theory played a role in our contemporary understanding of race and racial formation in the United States. From the Chinese Exclusion Act and Japanese American internment to the model minority myth and the globalization of Asian labor, Tara Fickle shows how games and game theory shaped fictions of race upon which the nation relies. Drawing from a wide range of literary and critical texts, analog and digital games, journalistic accounts, marketing campaigns, and archival material, Fickle illuminates the ways Asian Americans have had to fit the roles, play the game, and follow the rules to be seen as valuable in the US. Exploring key moments in the formation of modern US race relations, The Race Card charts a new course in gaming scholarship by reorienting our focus away from games as vehicles for empowerment that allow people to inhabit new identities, and toward the ways that games are used as instruments of soft power to advance top-down political agendas. Bridging the intellectual divide between the embedded mechanics of video games and more theoretical approaches to gaming rhetoric, Tara Fickle reveals how this intersection allows us to overlook the predominance of game tropes in national culture. The Race Card reveals this relationship as one of deep ideological and historical intimacy: how the games we play have seeped into every aspect of our lives in both monotonous and malevolent ways.
Mode of access: Internet via World Wide Web.
In English.
Description based on online resource; title from PDF title page (publisher's Web site, viewed 01. Nov 2023)

