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- Title
War Crimes, Cognitive Dissonance and the Abject: An Analysis of the Anti-War Wargame Spec Ops: The Line.
- Authors
Morwood, Nick
- Abstract
This article argues that the critical discourse on war video games is limited by a methodology that can tend to rely on theory above content, where politicaleconomists in communication studies frequently argue that games are little more than ciphers by which dominant ideologies-like the pre-eminence of the militarymedia complex-ensure their proliferation amongst wider culture, particularly in younger players. Political-economists of the military-industrial-entertainment complex have offered valuable structural analysis of the institutional and ideological links between the U.S. Department of Defense, video game corporations and warthemed video games. Several scholars have also analyzed how the narratives of war video games give ideological support to the U.S. Department of Defense and U.S. war policy. Though these studies are important, they overlook an important fact: that not all war-themed video games offer simplistic, one-dimensional and affirmative war stories and war play experiences. The goal of this article's analysis of Spec Ops: The Line is to show how an ostensible war game is capable of turning players against war or, at least, encouraging them to contemplate its consequences.
- Subjects
UNITED States; WAR crimes; COGNITIVE dissonance; WAR games; UNITED States. Dept. of Defense; MILITARY-industrial complex
- Publication
Democratic Communiqué, 2014, Vol 26, Issue 2, p107
- ISSN
1555-8967
- Publication type
Article