Women and games: Technologies of the gendered self
Document Type
Article
Publication Date
8-1-2007
Abstract
This study examines how individual differences in the consumption of computer games intersect with gender and how games and gender mutually constitute each other. The study focused on adult women with particular attention to differences in level of play, as well as genre preferences. Three levels of game consumption were identified. For power gamers, technology and gender are most highly integrated. These women enjoy multiple pleasures from the gaming experience, including mastery of game-based skills and competition. Moderate gamers play games in order to cope with their real lives. These women reported taking pleasure in controlling the gaming environment, or alternately that games provide a needed distraction from the pressures of their daily lives. Finally, the non-gamers who participated in the study expressed strong criticisms about game-playing and gaming culture. For these women, games are a waste of time, a limited commodity better spent on other activities. Copyright © 2007 SAGE Publicatoins.
Publication Title
New Media and Society
Recommended Citation
Royse, P.,
Lee, J.,
Undrahbuyan, B.,
Hopson, M.,
&
Consalvo, M.
(2007).
Women and games: Technologies of the gendered self.
New Media and Society,
9(4), 555-576.
http://doi.org/10.1177/1461444807080322
Retrieved from: https://digitalcommons.mtu.edu/michigantech-p/12928