Publication
Sailing with the Gods: serious games in an ancient sea
Downloadable Content
- Persistent URL
- Last modified
- 06/25/2025
- Type of Material
- Authors
-
-
Sandra Blakely, Emory University
- Language
- English
- Date
- 2018-11-14
- Publisher
- Thersites
- Publication Version
- Copyright Statement
- (c) 2018 Sandra Blakely
- License
- Final Published Version (URL)
- Title of Journal or Parent Work
- Volume
- 7
- Start Page
- 107
- End Page
- 153
- Abstract
- Maritime safety in the ancient Greek world was created through symbols and social practice as well as the science of seafaring. The human connections forged through ritual, myth and image enabled communication and granted authority to the civic institutions that offered legal and economic benefits. A gaming application offers a route to modelling the triangulation of seascapes, civic institutions, and narratives through which people and goods moved around the ancient Mediterranean. The game was inspired by the promise of maritime safety given to initiates into the mystery cult of the Great Gods of Samothrace, where grants of proxenia and theoria represent the civic counterparts of mystic promises and tales of supernatural intervention. The flexibility that characterizes ancient proxenia recommends the framework of a game; the bridge between imagination and strategic outcomes that characterizes serious games maps onto the ancient realities of the maritime success enabled through ritual force and civic institutions.
- Keywords
- Research Categories
- History, European
- History, Ancient
Tools
- Download Item
- Contact Us
-
Citation Management Tools
Relations
- In Collection:
Items
| Thumbnail | Title | File Description | Date Uploaded | Visibility | Actions |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
|
|
Publication File - wb2t3.pdf | Primary Content | 2025-06-05 | Public | Download |