Past Event! Note: this event has already taken place.

When: Friday, September 23rd, 2016
Time: 3:00 pm — 4:30 pm
Location:Loeb Building, A720
Audience:Anyone
Cost:Free
Contact:Ira Wagman, Ira.Wagman@carleton.ca, 613-520-2600 x.2639

Featuring Dr. Michael Newman

About the talk

During their decade of emergence – from 1972, when Pong was introduced, to the height of Pac-Man Fever in 1982 – the new medium of video games was understood in contradictory ways. Would video games embody middle-class legitimacy or reflect the lingering disrepute of pinball arcades? Were they a new, participatory use for television or an intensification of television’s power? Would they foster family togetherness or allow boys to escape from domesticity? Would they make the new home computer a tool for education or a potentially wasteful toy?

In this talk, Dr. Michael Newman charts the emergence of video games in America from ball-and-paddle games to hits like Space Invaders and Pac-Man, describing their relationship to other amusements and technologies and showing how they came to be identified with the middle class, youth, and masculinity.

Dr. Michael Newman is associate professor of Media Studies and chair of the Journalism, Advertising, and Media Studies program at the University of Wisconsin-Milwaukee. Dr. Newman is the author of Indie: An American Film Culture (Columbia U Press, 2011) and Video Revolutions: On the History of a Medium (Columbia U Press, 2014).  He is also the co-author (with Elana Levine) of Legitimizing Television: Media Convergence and Cultural Status (Routledge, 2014).