Global gaming networks are heterogenous collectives of localized practices, not unified commercial products. Shifting the analysis of digital games to local specificities that build and perform the global and general, Gaming Rhythms employs ethnographic work conducted in Venezuela and Australia to account for the material experiences of actual game players.

Sunday, January 23, 2005

A Day in the Life of Stewart Woods


I wish I'd done that much work some days! Posted by Hello


When Stewart Woods isn't writing emails, he's updating his blog, or writing articles for Game Studies.


4 comments:

Tom said...
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Tom said...
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Tom said...
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Tom said...

Can you believ it took me three attempts (well actually four) to type with correct spelling:

LOL! I was not expecting to hear from you until tomorrow :)

I'm really not looking forward to editing the work I've been doing today if my typing skill are that bad

About Me

This blog started as a PhD blog, for my project 'Global Rhythms: Video games and the Transformation of Play'. It finally become a book. This is a "historic" record of the trials a tribulations.