Silicon Ashes to Silicon Ashes, Digital Dust to Digital Dust: Chronolibido and Technological Fragility in GlitchHiker

Open Access
Authors
Publication date 2022
Host editors
  • C. Kelly
  • J. Kemper
  • E. Rutten
Book title Imperfections
Book subtitle Studies in Mistakes, Flaws, and Failures
ISBN
  • 9781501380341
ISBN (electronic)
  • 9781501380303
  • 9781501380327
  • 9781501380334
Series Thinking | media
Chapter 7
Pages (from-to) 165-188
Number of pages 23
Publisher New York : Bloomsbury Academic
Organisations
  • Faculty of Humanities (FGw) - Amsterdam Institute for Humanities Research (AIHR) - Amsterdam School for Cultural Analysis (ASCA)
Abstract
In this chapter, media scholar Jakko Kemper examines GlitchHiker (2011), a Dutch video game that was effectively programmed to expire and is now no longer playable. The chapter focuses on GlitchHiker’s communication of its deteriorating health through the use of glitch aesthetics — a visual and aural form of aesthetics crafted from technological breakdown that has often been labeled in terms of imperfection. By linking the game’s glitch-based signification of technological finitude and fragility to Martin Hägglund’s concept of chronolibido and to Steven Jackson’s repair-and-maintenance paradigm, Kemper reveals how the game’s finite constitution fostered a sense of care and empathy in its audience. He concludes that GlitchHiker’s imperfection- and finitude-oriented ethos is indicative of potentially more sustainable and thoughtful modes of relating to technology. With this ethos, the makers provide a productive counterweight to Silicon Valley’s design philosophy of frictionlessness, according to which any emergent form of technological imperfection should be negated through commercial transactions in the form of updates or replacements.
Document type Chapter
Note Available in UvA catalogue.
Language English
Published at https://doi.org/10.5040/9781501380303.ch-007
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