Where: Workers Action Center, 2nd floor, 720 Spadina Ave. Not everyone plays digital games, but with the rise of casual, mobile-based gaming, we all know someone who does. With global sales revenues that far exceed global Hollywood’s annual box office, the digital games industry is a leading and fast-growing sector of digital capitalism, and the logics and mechanics of digital games are spreading through the wider economy at a breakneck pace, with the insurance industry and ride share apps looking towards ‘gamification’ and other forms of psychological nudging to influence the behavior of workers and consumers alike. In this session of The Capitalism Workshop, Daniel Joseph focuses on two sides of digital games: the commodification of play through new commodity forms bolstered by digital platforms, and the production of games, which is tied up with highly exploitative labour practices, neoliberal development models, and cultural imperialism. The contradictions and conflicts arising from the intertwining of digital games and capitalism have led over the past year to a massive, and long-overdue, explosion of class consciousness in the games industry. Game Workers Unite has subsequently emerged as an international labour organization dedicated to unionizing workers in an industry historically hostile to labour politics and collective action. The digital games industry is ‘the canary in the coal mine’ of capitalism: it tells us about the dangers coming our way as well as the new forms of class struggle emerging in response. Bio: Daniel Joseph (PhD) is a Post-doctoral fellow and lecturer (Department of Arts, Culture and Media University of Toronto Scarborough), a freelance journalist (published in venues such as Jacobin, Real Life Magazine, and VICE), and is a member of the Toronto chapter of Game Workers Unite. He holds a PhD in Communication and Culture from Ryerson University and York University.
Facebook eventJoin us on Wednesday February 10th for the launch of Socialist Register 21: Beyond Digital Capitalism (Merlin Press, 2020), with presentations by Greg Albo, Sam Gindin, Bryan Palmer, Joan Sangster, Stephen Maher, Pat Armstrong, Hugh Armstrong, Tanner Mirrlees, and Derek Hrynyshyn. Learn More
When: Sunday December 13th, 2pm A second wave of the pandemic is raging across the country, and Toronto and other cities are again in lockdown. Austerity for social provisioning including public transit is high on the agenda for city governments across North America. In Toronto, both the city government and the Toronto Transit Commission are […] Learn More