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The video game industry is big business, not only in terms of the
substantial revenue generated through retail sales of games
themselves, but also in terms of the size and value of parallel and
secondary markets. Consider any popular video game today, and you
most likely are looking at a franchise that includes not only the
game itself and all of its variants but also toys, books, movies,
and more, with legions of fans that interact with the industry in
myriad ways. Surveying the legal landscape of this emergent
industry, Ron Gard and Elizabeth Townsend-Gard shed light on the
many important topics where law is playing an important role. In
examining these issues, Video Games and the Law is both a legal and
a cultural look at the development of the video game industry and
the role that law has played so far in this industry's ability to
thrive and grow.
The video game industry is big business, not only in terms of the
substantial revenue generated through retail sales of games
themselves, but also in terms of the size and value of parallel and
secondary markets. Consider any popular video game today, and you
most likely are looking at a franchise that includes not only the
game itself and all of its variants but also toys, books, movies,
and more, with legions of fans that interact with the industry in
myriad ways. Surveying the legal landscape of this emergent
industry, Ron Gard and Elizabeth Townsend-Gard shed light on the
many important topics where law is playing an important role. In
examining these issues, Video Games and the Law is both a legal and
a cultural look at the development of the video game industry and
the role that law has played so far in this industry's ability to
thrive and grow.
This true contemporary account of an American nurse's horrific -
and sometimes bizarre - experiences at a French battlefield
hospital during World War I has poignant layers which even the
oft-naive author did not see. Too soon, she was standing hours on
end treating friend and enemy alike, facing harrowing hyperreality
with aplomb. Shirley Millard is throughout a willing reporter of
her fascinating perspective on war, youth, loss, and love -- and
always slapdash surgery and gallows camaraderie, inside a MASH unit
before there was M*A*S*H. And before antibiotics, it is painfully
clear. But she is also an unwitting reporter of so much more. The
modern reader sees truths and wrongs that Shirley fails to
experience herself, some at the time and too many upon rested
reflection. The book compels attention not only on the level on
which she wrote it, which would be enough to bring crashing home
this forgotten war, but also on levels hidden to her. This
collection of diary entries and later flashbacks compares to better
known personal accounts of World War I, such as that by the much
more self-aware Erich Remarque (though readers here may find
themselves drawn into the lack of awareness as much as the account
itself). Yet this book seems to have been lost in time and the
crush of later events. Includes penetrating new Foreword by law
professor Elizabeth Townsend Gard, who studied the genre as part of
her Ph.D. research in History at UCLA. The original book, and its
incongruities and twists revealed by Townsend Gard, will stick with
the reader. Previously only available as a rare book, now returned
to its place in poignant history. Targeted at trade and general
audiences, may also be appropriate for YA (some upsetting scenes
and carnage of war but no other inappropriate scenes; teaches
subtext and foreshadowing, and allows discussion of women in war,
nationalism, class, race, and relationships). Also sold in ebook
formats.
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