Navigating Imaginary Worlds: Wayfinding and Subcreation
This edited anthology offers a collection of essays that each look at various types of wayfinding. Together they explore a variety of wayfinding tools and techniques and their applications, as well as ways of keeping track of the construction of worlds too.

With transmedial worlds extending over multiple media, multiple authors, and sometimes even multiple decades of creation, a wealth of different issues can arise; worlds need to direct audience members into how to organize them conceptually. Edited by Mark J. P Wolf and featuring contributions from a distinguished set of authors from interdisciplinary backgrounds, this book enriches the theory, history, and practice of world-building, through the exploration of navigation. The essays have many overlapping concerns and together they provide the reader with a range of discussions regarding wayfinding and the many ways it intersects with world-building - and world-experiencing - activities. Thus, rather than just analyzing worlds themselves, the anthology also asks the reader to consider analyzing the act of world-building itself.

This collection will be of interest to students and scholars in a variety of fields including Subcreation Studies, Transmedia Studies, Popular Culture, Comparative Media Studies, Video Game Studies, Film Studies, and Interdisciplinary Literary Studies.

1146868748
Navigating Imaginary Worlds: Wayfinding and Subcreation
This edited anthology offers a collection of essays that each look at various types of wayfinding. Together they explore a variety of wayfinding tools and techniques and their applications, as well as ways of keeping track of the construction of worlds too.

With transmedial worlds extending over multiple media, multiple authors, and sometimes even multiple decades of creation, a wealth of different issues can arise; worlds need to direct audience members into how to organize them conceptually. Edited by Mark J. P Wolf and featuring contributions from a distinguished set of authors from interdisciplinary backgrounds, this book enriches the theory, history, and practice of world-building, through the exploration of navigation. The essays have many overlapping concerns and together they provide the reader with a range of discussions regarding wayfinding and the many ways it intersects with world-building - and world-experiencing - activities. Thus, rather than just analyzing worlds themselves, the anthology also asks the reader to consider analyzing the act of world-building itself.

This collection will be of interest to students and scholars in a variety of fields including Subcreation Studies, Transmedia Studies, Popular Culture, Comparative Media Studies, Video Game Studies, Film Studies, and Interdisciplinary Literary Studies.

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Navigating Imaginary Worlds: Wayfinding and Subcreation

Navigating Imaginary Worlds: Wayfinding and Subcreation

Navigating Imaginary Worlds: Wayfinding and Subcreation

Navigating Imaginary Worlds: Wayfinding and Subcreation

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Overview

This edited anthology offers a collection of essays that each look at various types of wayfinding. Together they explore a variety of wayfinding tools and techniques and their applications, as well as ways of keeping track of the construction of worlds too.

With transmedial worlds extending over multiple media, multiple authors, and sometimes even multiple decades of creation, a wealth of different issues can arise; worlds need to direct audience members into how to organize them conceptually. Edited by Mark J. P Wolf and featuring contributions from a distinguished set of authors from interdisciplinary backgrounds, this book enriches the theory, history, and practice of world-building, through the exploration of navigation. The essays have many overlapping concerns and together they provide the reader with a range of discussions regarding wayfinding and the many ways it intersects with world-building - and world-experiencing - activities. Thus, rather than just analyzing worlds themselves, the anthology also asks the reader to consider analyzing the act of world-building itself.

This collection will be of interest to students and scholars in a variety of fields including Subcreation Studies, Transmedia Studies, Popular Culture, Comparative Media Studies, Video Game Studies, Film Studies, and Interdisciplinary Literary Studies.


Product Details

ISBN-13: 9781032819549
Publisher: Taylor & Francis
Publication date: 06/15/2025
Pages: 316
Product dimensions: 6.00(w) x 9.00(h) x (d)

About the Author

Mark J. P. Wolf is a professor in the Department of Digital Media and Design at Concordia University Wisconsin, USA. His books include The Video Game Theory Reader 1 and 2 (2003; 2008), The Video Game Explosion (2007), Before the Crash (2012), Encyclopedia of Video Games (two-volume 1st edition, 2012; three-volume 2nd edition, 2021), Building Imaginary Worlds (2012), LEGO Studies (2014), The Routledge Companion to Video Game Studies (1st edition, 2014; 2nd edition, 2023), Video Games Around the World (2015), Video Games and Gaming Culture (2016), Video Games FAQ (2017), Revisiting Imaginary Worlds (2017), The Routledge Companion to Imaginary Worlds (2017), The Routledge Companion to Media Technology and Obsolescence (2018), 101 Enigmatic Puzzles: Fractal Mazes, Quantum Chess, Anagram Sudoku, and More (2020), World-Builders on World-Building (2020), Exploring Imaginary Worlds (2020), The Seven Stones (2024), Zoophemera (2024), and Calculated Imagery: A History of Computer Graphics in Hollywood Cinema (2025).

Table of Contents

About the Contributors
Acknowledgments
Foreword
/Kevin Conran
Introduction
Mark J. P. Wolf
FINDING ONE’S WAY AROUND
World-Building, Emplotment, and Disorientation in Gangs of New York
Henry Jenkins
Comic Book Encyclopedias: The What, When, Where, Why and How of DC’s Who’s Who and The Official Handbook of the Marvel Universe
/Blair Davis
Navigating Ludotopia, Exploring Allotopia: Natural and Unnatural Exploration of Open Worlds in Video Games
/Krzysztof M. Maj
The Importance of Afterstory and Tolkien’s Fourth Age
Mark J. P. Wolf
WAYFINDING IN INTERACTIVE WORLDS
Pinball Playfields: Mapping Heavy Metal
/Ryan Banfi
Toys-to-Guide: Nintendo amiibo as Transmedial Waypoints
/Matthew Thomas Payne
The Warhammer Product and Service Portfolio: Wayfinding as Competitive Advantage
Neal Baker
Where Be Witches? The Role of Adventure Maps in Building a Game World
Stefan Ekman
The Soundscape of the Metaverse: Aural Navigation in Meta’s Horizon Worlds
Harry Burson
Transcendent Travels: Wayfinding in Extended Realities
/Gundolf S. Freyermuth
CONCEPTUAL WAYFINDING
Miniature Worlds
Mark J. P. Wolf
Journey Loops and Vicious Circles: Lessons of Unfortunate Adventures in Romantic Tales
Lily Alexander
Artificial Intelligence and the Possibility of Sub-Subcreation
Mark J. P. Wolf
Research as a Navigating Tool
/Nathali H. S. Pilegaard
APPENDIX
The Cartographers of Vasterra
Mark J. P. Wolf
Index

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