How can video games be used as feminist tactical media to expose the root of exclusions (based on sex, gender, class, race, ability, etc.) pervasive to gaming communities? Through the development of collective ludic experiments and play sessions, game prototypes, and work-shops, “Storming the Gamergate” proposes to explore the potential of video games as a tactical artistic medium. Using a materialist feminist lens, the investigation will attempt to read the reproduction of ideo-logies of sexual difference in relation to dominant modes of production.
Historically, the multibillion-dollar video game industry has primarily catered to a straight, white male au-dience. This was most clearly demonstrated by the Gamergate events of 2014. Several accounts of how these events foreshadowed the tactics accompanying the rise to prominence of the alt-right and how Gamergate communities overlap and merge with this larger, pre-existing movement, reveal the urgency in researching and understanding video game cultures and subcultures.
Authors such as Vicky Osterweil, Nick Dyer-Witheford, and Greg dePeuter have stressed the role of video games as a reproductive technology, one which trains subjects in ways that subscribe to dominant neoliberal values. Nonetheless, the capacity of video games for engagement has been equally explored for its emancipatory potential. This research project argues that the unique capacity of video games to engage emotionally and provide immersive experiences of alternative realities can be used as a tool to reveal and question capitalist ideology. As such, it considers video games an especially persuasive medium for artis-tic expression.
Rooted in the historical relationship of art and play forwarded by movements such as Dada, Fluxus, and Situationism, "Storming the Gamergate" navigates the fields of artgames and Game Art in order to ex-pand, hijack, abuse, and experiment with mainstream video gaming canon.
Lídia Pereira (1990, PT) studied at the Piet Zwart Institute in Rotterdam (MA Media Design and Communication) and at the Faculty of Fine Arts of the University of Porto (BA Communication Design). Her practice bridges the fields of graphic design, art, digital media and infrastructure, critical theory, and publishing.
In 2015, she founded the Pervasive Labour Union zine, a semi-regular publication in which contributors reflect on topics relating to labour on corporate social networks, algorithmic governance, and alternative digital infrastructures. She is a member of Varia, a collective-space in Rotterdam focused on everyday technologies.
She has presented her work at Transmediale, Impakt, V2_, Spui25 and the Making Public Conference. She has given guest lectures and workshops at the Piet Zwart Institute, Willem de Kooning Academy, Mz* Baltazar, and Baltan Laboratories. In 2019, her essay “Redirecting Responsibility: From Structural Insecurity to Systemic Depression” was published by the Institute of Network Cultures.
The use of fiction as a method to pose question and criticise the status quo has long expanded beyond the realms of literature and cinema.…
In collaboration with 'Page not Found' and the Master Experimental Publishing (XPUB) at the Piet Zwart Institute, Lídia Pereira co-organizes an online lecture…
Lídia Pereira presents 'Feditation' at the symposium 'Coherency, Diversity and Networks in Artistic Research' as part of the Desktop Essays series.