Rockstar Games, Red Dead Redemption, and Narratives of “Progress”

In both popular and historiographical discussions of the nineteenth- and twentieth-century American West, and the successive waves of popular culture that have come to represent Westward expansion and colonization, there has been much negotiation and debate over the nature and meaning of “progress.”...

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Main Author: Esther Wright
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: European Association for American Studies 2021-09-01
Series:European Journal of American Studies
Subjects:
Online Access:http://journals.openedition.org/ejas/17300
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spelling doaj-042f00499b264ba6829ee71d1b8447be2021-09-21T14:53:38ZengEuropean Association for American StudiesEuropean Journal of American Studies1991-93362021-09-0116310.4000/ejas.17300Rockstar Games, Red Dead Redemption, and Narratives of “Progress”Esther WrightIn both popular and historiographical discussions of the nineteenth- and twentieth-century American West, and the successive waves of popular culture that have come to represent Westward expansion and colonization, there has been much negotiation and debate over the nature and meaning of “progress.” Usually bound up with other loaded terms such as “civilization” (and its implicit antithesis, “savagery”), popular culture that falls under the broader umbrella of the Western genre has often used the idea of progress and development, from past to future, as a cornerstone of their stories and messages. This article uses game developer Rockstar Games and the company’s popular and commercially successful Red Dead Redemption franchise (2010-2018) to examine how narratives of “progress” have been used by the company not only to create their own representations of US history but, moreover, to prop up the promotional discourses that the company uses to brand themselves and sell their products. Ultimately, this article explores the tensions between a company that claims to offer games that are both “authentic” and critical of turn-of-the-century US history and culture, yet which implicitly rely on the ideologies that accompany narratives of “progress” and “civilization,” bound up as they are with the Frontier myth, white supremacy, and colonialism.http://journals.openedition.org/ejas/17300American WestFrontier NarrativeRed Dead RedemptionRockstar GamesMarketing
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Esther Wright
spellingShingle Esther Wright
Rockstar Games, Red Dead Redemption, and Narratives of “Progress”
European Journal of American Studies
American West
Frontier Narrative
Red Dead Redemption
Rockstar Games
Marketing
author_facet Esther Wright
author_sort Esther Wright
title Rockstar Games, Red Dead Redemption, and Narratives of “Progress”
title_short Rockstar Games, Red Dead Redemption, and Narratives of “Progress”
title_full Rockstar Games, Red Dead Redemption, and Narratives of “Progress”
title_fullStr Rockstar Games, Red Dead Redemption, and Narratives of “Progress”
title_full_unstemmed Rockstar Games, Red Dead Redemption, and Narratives of “Progress”
title_sort rockstar games, red dead redemption, and narratives of “progress”
publisher European Association for American Studies
series European Journal of American Studies
issn 1991-9336
publishDate 2021-09-01
description In both popular and historiographical discussions of the nineteenth- and twentieth-century American West, and the successive waves of popular culture that have come to represent Westward expansion and colonization, there has been much negotiation and debate over the nature and meaning of “progress.” Usually bound up with other loaded terms such as “civilization” (and its implicit antithesis, “savagery”), popular culture that falls under the broader umbrella of the Western genre has often used the idea of progress and development, from past to future, as a cornerstone of their stories and messages. This article uses game developer Rockstar Games and the company’s popular and commercially successful Red Dead Redemption franchise (2010-2018) to examine how narratives of “progress” have been used by the company not only to create their own representations of US history but, moreover, to prop up the promotional discourses that the company uses to brand themselves and sell their products. Ultimately, this article explores the tensions between a company that claims to offer games that are both “authentic” and critical of turn-of-the-century US history and culture, yet which implicitly rely on the ideologies that accompany narratives of “progress” and “civilization,” bound up as they are with the Frontier myth, white supremacy, and colonialism.
topic American West
Frontier Narrative
Red Dead Redemption
Rockstar Games
Marketing
url http://journals.openedition.org/ejas/17300
work_keys_str_mv AT estherwright rockstargamesreddeadredemptionandnarrativesofprogress
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