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friends that game together: A folkloric expansion of textual poaching to genre farming for socialization in tabletop role-playing games
Author(s) -
Michael Robert Underwood
Publication year - 2009
Publication title -
transformative works and cultures
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
ISSN - 1941-2258
DOI - 10.3983/twc.2009.087
Subject(s) - folklore , narrative , ethnography , sociology , entertainment , communitas , socialization , identity (music) , cultural capital , participant observation , social capital , media studies , psychology , visual arts , social psychology , aesthetics , art , social science , literature , anthropology , liminality
Tabletop role-playing games (RPGs) are a folkloric form for creating and reaffirming community bonds and performing identity. Gaming is used to communicate and perform cultural capital and identity through fictional narratives, functioning as a form of community building and/or personal expression. With quotations from ethnographic research over the course of 2 years, including interviews with several groups of gamers and participant observation, I examine the ways that players create and affirm social bonds. I return to Michel De Certeau's idea of textual poaching, as adapted by Henry Jenkins, to contrast with it a new concept of genre farming. As both platform for and object of genre farming, RPGs allow players to display cultural competence, create and reaffirm social ties, and seek entertainment in a collaborative fashion.

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