Playing Along: Digital Games, YouTube, and Virtual Performance

· Oxford University Press
3.3
135 reviews
eBook
272
Pages
Eligible

About this eBook

Why don't Guitar Hero players just pick up real guitars? What happens when millions of people play the role of a young black gang member in Grand Theft Auto: San Andreas? How are YouTube-based music lessons changing the nature of amateur musicianship? This book is about play, performance, and participatory culture in the digital age. Miller shows how video games and social media are bridging virtual and visceral experience, creating dispersed communities who forge meaningful connections by "playing along" with popular culture. Playing Along reveals how digital media are brought to bear in the transmission of embodied knowledge: how a Grand Theft Auto player uses a virtual radio to hear with her avatar's ears; how a Guitar Hero player channels the experience of a live rock performer; and how a beginning guitar student translates a two-dimensional, pre-recorded online music lesson into three-dimensional physical practice and an intimate relationship with a distant teacher. Through a series of engaging ethnographic case studies, Miller demonstrates that our everyday experiences with interactive digital media are gradually transforming our understanding of musicality, creativity, play, and participation.

Ratings and reviews

3.3
135 reviews
Ryland Bennett
28 March 2015
Excellent content, thoroughly researched, engagingly written. Addresses important subjects often marginalized by more traditional musical scholarship yet deserving of rigorous academic analysis. A game changer!
3 people found this review helpful
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angel mccarty
28 January 2014
My daughter download the sample on my tablet and onto my play book app and now I do t know how to take it off .it needs a delete button to take things off so not kool .
1 person found this review helpful
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Cyra Joi Deleon
10 June 2014
Why guita hero
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About the author

Kiri Miller is the Manning Assistant Professor of Music at Brown University. She is the author of Traveling Home: Sacred Harp Singing and American Pluralism (2008). Her research stands at the intersection of ethnomusicology, popular music studies, and digital media studies. Her work has been supported by fellowships from the Radcliffe Institute for Advanced Study and the American Council of Learned Societies.

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