Archaeogaming Antics: Computer Science Meets Archaeology
John Aycock (University of Calgary)
Tuesday March 12, 2024, 16:00 GMT = 18:00 EET = 11:00 EST
How can a digital artifact like a video game be studied? One approach is to reverse-engineer the game's code
and data, the language of binary 1s and 0s that instruct the computer how to bring the game to life. My collaborators and I have applied this method to the study of old, "retro" video games, (re)discovering the clever ways that game programmers would create
games on highly constrained computers, and seeing that human interactions with technology have changed little since stone tools were in vogue. This interdisciplinary work fits under the umbrella of "archaeogaming", which has been defined as the archaeology
in and of video games, but at the same time challenges traditional ideas of what an artifact is and how it can be studied. Multiple examples will be used to surprise and delight.
The Spring 2024 Material Digital Humanities seminar is organised by Gabriel Bodard, Shawn Graham and
Rada Varga and co-hosted by the Digital Humanities Research Hub, University of London, UK; Department of History, Carleton University, Canada; Star-UBB Institute of Advanced Studies, University Babeș-Bolyai, Cluj Napoca, Romania.
This seminar series will present a range of discussions around materiality and the research possibilities
offered by digital methods and approaches. More than just the value of digitization and computational research to the study of material culture, we are especially interested in theoretical and digital approaches to the question of materiality itself. We do
not restrict ourselves to any period of history or academic discipline, but want to encourage interdisciplinarity and collaborative work, and the valuable exchange of ideas enabled by cross-pollination of languages, areas of history, geography and cultures.
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Dr Gabriel BODARD (he/him)
Reader in Digital Classics
Director of Studies (research): Digital Humanities Research Hub
Director of Studies (research): Institute of Classical Studies
Mailing address:
Institute of Classical Studies
University of London
Senate House
Malet Street
London WC1E 7HU
Especially at the moment, I may email at odd hours of the day and night/days of the week. I do not ever expect a reply outside of your working hours.