Title (eng)
From Fragmentation to Formation: Academic Anthologies as Catalysts for Digital Game Studies. Reflections on the Fallout Collection Old World Blues
Description (eng)
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.
Keywords (eng)
FalloutAnthologiesDigital Game StudiesResearch DisseminationResearch Practice
Type (eng)
Language
[eng]
Is contained in
Title
Gaming the Apocalypse
ISBN
978-3-903470-30-9
Publication
University of Krems Press
Publication
University of Krems Press
Date issued
2025-11-14