Registration is required for DiGRA A 19. Please register at the link below:
https://www.eventbrite.com.au/e/digra-australia-2019-whats-next-tickets-51994263241
Registration is required for DiGRA A 19. Please register at the link below:
https://www.eventbrite.com.au/e/digra-australia-2019-whats-next-tickets-51994263241
9:00 |
New to DiGRA Breakfast If you’re new to DiGRA, we invite you to meet the DIGRAA Board and organising committee for coffee at the Courtyard Cafe, near the venue. |
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10:00 |
Playing with choices and moral dilemmas: Analyzing the challenges of the gamer mindset Keynote by Professor Mia Consalvo Canada Research Chair In Game Studies & Design Keynote Supported by the Sydney Social Sciences and Humanities Advanced Research Centre |
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11:15 |
Short Break |
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11:30 | Cameron Edmond | Let’s play OuLiPo: machine writing practice as play |
11:45 | David Cumming, Martin Gibbs and Wally Smith | Between places: spectatorship at an Australian esports bar |
12:00 | Ben Egliston | The data assemblage of play: Analytics, surveillance, memory |
12:15 | Rowan Tulloch and Craig Johnson | The Player as Data: The Hidden Algorithms of Dystopia |
12:30 |
Lunch One Hour |
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13:30 | Dan Padua | The normalisation of ‘video gaming parents’ in the era of eSports |
13:45 | Christopher Moore, Richard Hall and Angus Baillie | Cardboard Asia: representation, cultural literacy and infrastructure in the analogue game industry |
14:00 | Melissa J. Rogerson, Martin Gibbs and Wally Smith | Understanding the travel motivations of game hobbyists |
14:15 | Gawain Lucian Lax and Madeleine Mackenzie | Against All Odds: Desire and Monetisation in Japanese Mobile Games |
14:30 |
Afternoon Tea |
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15:00 | Lucy Sparrow | The moral (im)permissibility of groping in virtual reality games |
15:15 | John Pike | ‘Something that is ours’: VR and the values of gaming’s field |
15:30 | April Tyack | Splendid Isolation: Optimistic Relations Towards Virtual Experience |
15:45 | Kate Clark | Affective subject formation in video games |
16:00 | ||
16:30 | Kyle Moore | What’s Next for Location-based Gaming? |
16:45 | Luke van Ryn | Order Up: Decoding food through cooking games |
17:00 | Mahli-Ann Butt | ‘Fuck Game Studies’ |
18:30 |
Social Event Join us at the Nags Head on St John’s Road for Dinner and Drinks BYO Boardgames! |
Acknowledgements
DiGRAA 2019 is made possible thanks to the generous support provided by the School of Literature, Arts and Media and the Social Sciences and Humanities Advanced Research Centre at The University of Sydney
Frequently Asked Questions and Other Information
Lunch at the conference will be provided. Coffee and biscuits will be provided for the coffee/tea breaks.
Registration is required, please register here via Eventbrite.
Conference Location
DiGRA Australia 2019 will be held at The University of Sydney, Camperdown Campus in the new Social Sciences Building at The University of Sydney [Google Maps Link]. Registration will be on level 1 of the building in the foyer outside LT200 – the lecture theatre for the main conference.
The venue can be easily accessed via public transport along Parramatta Rd.
A casual social event on the evening of the 12th will be held at the Nag’s Head, a short walk away.
Keynote Address
The Keynote Address will be delivered by Professor Mia Consalvo, thanks to the support of the Sydney Social Sciences and Humanities Advanced Research Centre (SSSHARC)
Playing with choices and moral dilemmas: Analyzing the challenges of the gamer mindset
This talk builds off my early work studying players who enjoy games with moral and ethical dilemmas, as well as additional work creating a game that features such elements. Advancing that work, it asks how “regular” players, or those less likely to deeply engage with such game components, deal with such choices. Through a preliminary examination of You Tube Let’s Play videos as well as Twitch live streams of games including Firewatch and Life is Strange 2, the talk highlights the greater diversity of approaches that players take, and the particular issue of the ‘gamer mindset’ that many players employ. Additionally, the talk considers the challenges that game designers face when building such games, and how to possibly circumvent these limitations.
Biography:
Mia Consalvo is Professor and Canada Research Chair in Game Studies and Design at Concordia University in Montreal. She is the co-author of Players and their Pets, co-editor of Sports Videogames and author of Cheating: Gaining Advantage in Videogames. She has most recently completed the book Atari to Zelda: Japan’s Videogames in Global Context, about Japan’s influence on the videogame industry and game culture.
Mia runs the mLab, a space dedicated to developing innovative methods for studying games and game players. She’s a member of the Centre for Technoculture, Art & Games (TAG), she has presented her work at professional as well as academic conferences including regular presentations at the Game Developers Conference. She is the Past President of the Digital Games Research Association, and has held positions at MIT, Ohio University, Chubu University in Japan and the University of Wisconsin-Milwaukee.
DiGRA Australia is actively concerned with cultivating an inclusive research community. As such, as with previous DiGRA Australia events, registration for the 2019 National Conference will be free. Further, and for the first time, up to ten bursaries of no more than $500 each will be available for students and non-salaried early-career researchers no more than five years out from the end of their PhD who have a paper accepted to the conference to help cover travel and accommodation costs.
Applications for a travel bursary can be made through this form. Please complete your EasyChair submission of your abstract before completing this form.
DiGRA Australia has a long-standing commitment to inclusivity and diversity. We note that parent-researchers often face inequitable hurdles to attend and fully participate in conferences. As such, we have assembled the following information for parent researchers considering attending DiGRAA 2019.
Children at DiGRAA
We welcome children to DiGRA Australia, and any children in attendance are welcome to attend conference talks, meals and events for free. For catering purposes, please register your child on Eventbrite separately which will allow you to notify us of any dietary requirements your child has. The social event on the evening of the 12th will be held in the dining area of a local pub, where accompanied children can attend until 9pm. It is our hope that this will allow parent-researchers to more easily participate in the social events that are an important part of conferences.
Please note that some conference presentations may involve content that is unsuitable for younger audiences (such as discussions of violent or sexual imagery from videogames, or mature themes). Presenters will be notified in advance that there may be children in attendance, and to provide a content warning at the start of their talk so that children can be removed.
Parenting Space
We welcome babies to DiGRA Australia and breastfeeding is welcome anywhere at the conference. The conference venue is accessible to prams.
On Level 2 of the venue (accessible via lift) there is a dedicated parenting space for babycare needs including feeding and changing, with a microwave and hot water available. Unfortunately the parenting space does not have a refrigerator. Parents with babies are welcome to leave bags of childcare paraphernalia at the registration desk nearby.
Simply speak to a conference organiser on the day if you’ll require access to this space, and we’ll show you where it is.
Access to Child Care
As a small, free conference it is not possible for DiGRA Australia to provide on-site childcare. However, the following childcare centres located near The University of Sydney offer occasional care:
Redfern Occasional Care
55 Pitt Street
Redfern NSW 2016
+61 2 9288 5620
SDN Glebe Children’s Education & Care Centre
112a Glebe Street
Glebe NSW 2037
+61 2 9552 3747
Marrickville Occasional Care
356 Victoria Road
Marrickville NSW 2204
+61 2 9558 1591
Flexibility for Parents
To assist parent-researchers juggling child-care challenges, we are able to offer presenters flexibility in the day their talk is scheduled. Please contact the conference organiser after your talk is accepted if you have a preferred day, or time of day, for your talk.
As a free conference, caregivers are welcome to also attend with the researcher-parent, and caregivers attending alongside a researcher-parent are welcome to also attend conference talks, meals and events. Please register caregivers separately via eventbrite for catering purposes.
If you have questions or suggestions to improve this page, please contact the conference organiser Marcus Carter <marcus.carter@sydney.edu.au>
Acknowledgements
Calisi, R. (2018) Opinion: How to tackle the childcare-conference conundrum. Proceedings of the Natural Academic of Sciences USA 115(2): 2845-2849.
We are delighted to announce that DiGRAA 2019 will be held at The University of Sydney, February 12-13. The CFP is available here.
Key Dates
November 12th – Abstract Submission Deadline
December 12th – Notification of Submission Outcome
February 12th & 13th – Conference
DiGRA Australia 2019: What’s Next?
We invite you to contribute to a two-day game studies conference to be held 12th and 13th February at The University of Sydney. Registration for DiGRA Australia conferences is free.
Key Dates
November 12th – Abstract Submission Deadline
December 12th – Notification of Submission Outcome
February 12th & 13th – Conference
Keynote Speaker
Professor Mia Consalvo, Canada Research Chair in Game Studies & Design, Concordia University
Details
The academic field of game studies has largely arisen in the past 20 years, energised by the phenomenal growth of the digital games industry. More recent developments such as mobile gaming and the resurgence of non-digital play have encouraged scholars to acknowledge the plurality of game experiences, practices, cultures and design. Across Australia, studying games is increasingly becoming institutionally recognized and encouraged, and nominated as key areas of interest in job advertisements in departments traditionally specializing in literature, media studies, human-computer interaction and design.
So, this year’s DiGRA Australia conference asks, ‘What’s Next?’
It is our intent with this theme to encourage research and discussion that speaks to and guides the future direction of games research in Australia. We encourage submissions that reflect all aspects of scholarly engagement with games. It is not a requirement that submissions engage with this theme.
We organise such an event acknowledging that understanding games is not an exclusively academic endeavour and excellent work is occurring in a wide variety of spaces outside of formal scholarship. Consequently, we encourage non-academic game researchers, critics, designers, developers and artists to attend and contribute to the event.
Following on from the success of previous DiGRA Australia events, DiGRA Australia will remain a single track conference.
DiGRA Australia is actively concerned with cultivating an inclusive research community. As such, as with previous DiGRA Australia events, registration for the 2019 National Conference will be free. Further, and for the first time, up to ten bursaries of no more than $500 each will be available for students and non-salaried early-career researchers no more than five years out from the end of their PhD who have a paper accepted to the conference to help cover travel and accommodation costs.
Submission Format
We invite interested authors or makers to submit 400-800 word abstracts (not including references), anonymously for peer review.
We advise potential authors to review the abstracts accepted for publication at previous DiGRA Australia conferences [see here] as a guide to the expected tone and quality. Some further tips:
Accepted abstracts will be uploaded to the DiGRA Australia website.
Submission Process
Submissions will be made online, via easy chair:
https://easychair.org/conferences/?conf=digraa2019 |
Please enter your 400-800 word abstract or full paper in the abstract box in easy chair, as well as uploading it as a formatted attachment using the template here.
We ask authors not to submit more than 2 abstracts to the conference.
Applications for a travel bursary can be made through this form. Please complete your EasyChair submission of your abstract before completing this form.
Conference Committee
FAQ
Do I have to be a member of DiGRA or DIGRA Australia to submit an abstract or attend the conference?
No you do not have to be a member! The conference is open to all.
The Australian chapter of the Digital Games Research Association (DiGRA) invites expressions of interest from relevant departments, schools, or centres at Australian universities to host the fourth DiGRA Australia National Conference in February 2019.
The successful host will be selected by the DiGRA Australia board. The board will be guided by the following criteria in making their decision:
The deadline for expressions of interest is Friday, 31 August. The board will decide on a successful host in early September, with the intent to see a Call For Papers released shortly afterwards. Ideally, the peer review process for abstracts will be complete by mid-December.
Please send expressions of interest that address the above criteria, or any queries, to the DiGRA Australia President, Brendan Keogh (brendan.keogh@qut.edu.au).