Fri Aug 27, 2004 5:51 am by gromit
classing a computer game as a form of literature would be wrong....a form of new media, maybe, but not literature.
Games being studied at university or even school as they advance is highly likely - as a source of genuine historic value though? maybe, but they would have to be some seriously epic games - which I don't think suits the modern "9 second attention span" society. But all in all, yes, I can see that happening.
However, a computer game as literature? No. A film isn't literature, its a form of media - and is studied that way. The only time when films are offered up as part of a literature course is when they are accurate remakes of popular classic novels - jane austin, charles dickens, william shakespeare etc etc.
A film is a film, a book is a book, a computer game is a computer game.
Now seeing computer games being studied on a media course, that I can see - but seeing them on a literature course, I strongly doubt it. Not unless of course we see a popular computer game re-enactment of "Pride and Prejudice" or "A Tale of Two Cities"....but the chances of a game of that type being popular are very slim. People want computer games as a form of escapism, not as a chance to pair up Mr Darcy with his destined lover. Surely not.
Or am I wrong?