<resource xmlns:datacite="http://datacite.org/schema/kernel-4">
<creators>
<creator>
<creatorName nameType="Personal">Arno Görgen</creatorName>
<givenName>Arno</givenName>
<familyName>Görgen</familyName>
</creator>
<creator>
<creatorName nameType="Personal">Rudolf Thomas Inderst</creatorName>
<givenName>Rudolf Thomas</givenName>
<familyName>Inderst</familyName>
</creator>
</creators>
<titles>
<title>From Fragmentation to Formation: Academic Anthologies as Catalysts for Digital Game Studies. Reflections on the Fallout Collection Old World Blues</title>
</titles>
<publisher>University of Krems Press</publisher>
<publicationYear>2025</publicationYear>
<descriptions>
<description descriptionType="Other">Academic anthologies serve an invaluable function in the unification of disparate research domains, particularly in the domain of digital game studies. This abstracteditors as a principal illustration of the manner in which these collections facilitate academic cohesion, uniting a multiplicity of methodologies and perspectives. By addressing digital games as complex cultural, technological, and social phenomena, anthologies enhance the quality of scholarly discourse and facilitate the development of a shared academic framework. This contribution also examines four specific research fields and demonstrates why Fallout is an ideal topic for a game studies anthology. The Fallout series, with its intricate world-building, sociopolitical themes, and narrative depth, provides an ideal context for examining a range of issues, including post-apocalyptic storytelling, political allegory, player agency, and cultural memory. In this way, the anthology not only makes a contribution to the study of Fallout but also serves to exemplify how anthologies support and communicate the growth of digital game studies, offering foundational research and documenting the field's evolution.</description>
</descriptions>
<resourceType resourceTypeGeneral="Text">PDFDocument</resourceType>
<language>eng</language>
<dates>
<date dateType="Created">2025-11-14T10:30:03.795251Z</date>
<date dateType="Issued">2025-11-14</date>
</dates>
<subjects>
<subject>Fallout</subject>
<subject>Anthologies</subject>
<subject>Digital Game Studies</subject>
<subject>Research Dissemination</subject>
<subject>Research Practice</subject>
</subjects>
<sizes>
<size>419563 b</size>
</sizes>
<formats>
<format>application/pdf</format>
</formats>
<rightsList>
<rights rightsURI="http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc/4.0/">http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc/4.0/</rights>
</rightsList>
</resource>
