rant:the.phenomenon.of.grrl.gamers.
Note: This post was written in context to a current discussion being held within the community blogs at Destructoid.com, initiated by Reverend Anthony's recent podcast rant about the phenomenon of 'grrl gamers'. To get the full story, listen to Anthony's argument here a little before midway into the show and read VirtualGirl's response post here.
After listening to the good Reverend's rant and reading
Virtualgirl's response I felt the need to just skim the surface on my
personal thoughts in regards to the grrl gamers out there. I'm going to
try to keep it simple and short so as to potentially develop my
argument later, so here goes nothing:
Media scholar and philosopher Marshall McLuhan coined the quintessential expression "the medium is the message". Taking this into consideration with grrl gamers, the particular ailment of these female gaming communities is the dependency on the image as their first and foremost means of communicating their apparent plight for 'respect'. As Rev. explained, when these girls slather prolific amounts of photos of themselves the message they are projecting is very particularly and exclusively oriented towards distinguishing themselves as 'female' or 'not male', thereby immediately debasing whatever idea of equality they were supposedly demanding.
Why is this message so inherently black and white? Because these photos are circulated within and are part of the mass media in which personal intentions, general goodwill, and individual personalities behind the image are altogether ignored, erased, and replaced with the surface level meaning. Period.
I want to reiterate that the key phrase of this statement is 'mass media'. Personal stories such as VirtualGirl's reveal to us that there is a large level of devotion and meaning within such cultural acts as dressing up as Lara Croft at a convention which I can respect to a certain degree on an individual basis. Her passion and confidence for something that she loves are to be envied. But the mass media cares only what the masses want, and within this largely masculine gaming demographic the masses want to consume stereotypical, sexualized fantasy women, so thats what they will see.
My advice? If you want to discuss how you want to be treated
equally as a gamer because you think that you are somehow alienated by
your sex then write about it instead of posting photos of
yourself. What you look like has absolutely nothing to do with how
passionate you are about gaming or games.
Comments
I have a deep dislike for "grrl gamers" and I hate how the majority of them demand attention for being rare when in actuality, if you count casual games, girls are in the majority. Them spouting off about how rare they are and with addition of the photos and attention they crave give the idiots on online services the idea that girls are few and far between and that they don't belong or that they should be doing something sexy since almost all pictures of grrl gamers are something stupid like licking a PSP or being naked with controllers.
Anyway, the moral is.. Don't be a fucking attention whore because I'm tired of telling people on XBL that I'm a 9 year old boy just to avoid the "attention."
I'll be sure to expand on this topic in the future... the social and cultural development around the video game industry is unique, fascinating, and of course too important to me to not ignore it.