*Game Studies* in collaboration with Guest Editors, Holger Pötzsch and Phil
Hammond, invite submissions for a Special Issue on “War/Games"
<http://gamestudies.org/1501/articles/cfp_wargames>

Video games are an important sector of the global entertainment industry
and AAA titles often have budgets and audiences similar to those of major
Hollywood productions. Many of the commercially most successful games are
war-themed titles that play out in what are framed as authentic real-world
settings inspired by historical events. Parallel to this development,
significant changes have occurred in the way Western industrialized nations
wage actual wars. It has been argued that postmodern war increasingly
resembles a videogame and that this form of mediatization fundamentally
changes how wars are justified, perceived, experienced, and waged. This,
and other postulated connections between war games and actual wars merit
critical scholarly attention and scrutiny.

This special issue of *Game Studies* interrogates the relations between
games and war. Particular attention will be directed to digital games, but
submissions dealing with board games, tabletop roleplaying games, and
others are also welcome. We invite contributions that approach the war/game
relationship from various theoretical and methodological vantage points.
Interdisciplinary studies fall within the purview of the issue as do
articles exploring the field from the point of view of distinct
disciplinary traditions. Analysis and criticism of particular games or
genres are equally welcome, as are empirical studies of players and player
cultures, investigations of the political economy of games and gaming,
theoretical inquiries into the socio-cultural roles and functions of games,
or studies of the tensions between game forms and re-appropriative
practices of play, for example. Possible topics include, but are not
limited to:

* The aesthetics of war games
* Interconnections between the games industry, players, and the military
* The relation of war games to historical knowledge, beliefs and attitudes
* The history of war games and war gaming
* War games and embodiment
* Critical war game design and serious war games
* Transgressive dimensions of war games and war gaming
* The role of games in the mediatization and cultural framing of war
* War games, minorities, and marginalization


Please consult the *Game Studies* submission guidelines
<http://gamestudies.org/1001/submission_guidelines> before submitting your
paper. Only fully formatted articles will be considered for review.
*Timeline*:

Submission deadline: *1 December 2015*
Publication: December 2016
Guest editors: Holger Pötzsch <[email protected]?subject=War%2FGames>
and Phil Hammond <[email protected]?subject=War%2FGames>
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