Objectification is the reduction of a person to an object.
Let me emphasize the word that everybody seems to have forgotten:
Objectification is the reduction of a PERSON to an object.
PERSON.
Kratos is not a person. He is lines of code. He is an object created for my entertainment (and yours, if you like God of War games), and is therefore very much a "thing" I want to "own." If I hop on Amazon right now, I can purchase the collector's edition of him for $80 + s&h. If I buy every GoW game, I will possess every line of code that can possible be identified as Kratos and will therefore possess HIM in a way that allows me to act out my power fantasies and satisfy my entertainment cravings without ever letting Kratos "initiate" a session or have any say in our player-to-character relationship.
Is buying and possessing a person wrong? Yes.
Is buying and possessing Kratos wrong? No. Why? Because Kratos is NOT a person. He does not exist outside code embedded in a disk or saved in a hard drive. If you disagree, feel free to sue Sony for human trafficking (demigod trafficking?).
With the definition of objectification in mind--and paying SPECIAL attention to the word "PERSON"--Jim's video is simply an assertion that female gamers aren't getting the entertainment they desire out of the video game industry, which is a problem but is a far fucking cry from the dehumanization of the entire gender. Believe it or not, video games are not responsible for prostitution, sex trade, domestic violence, rape, the glass ceiling, the wage gap, etc., so please stop making videos to suggest so.
Let me emphasize the word that everybody seems to have forgotten:
Objectification is the reduction of a PERSON to an object.
PERSON.
Kratos is not a person. He is lines of code. He is an object created for my entertainment (and yours, if you like God of War games), and is therefore very much a "thing" I want to "own." If I hop on Amazon right now, I can purchase the collector's edition of him for $80 + s&h. If I buy every GoW game, I will possess every line of code that can possible be identified as Kratos and will therefore possess HIM in a way that allows me to act out my power fantasies and satisfy my entertainment cravings without ever letting Kratos "initiate" a session or have any say in our player-to-character relationship.
Is buying and possessing a person wrong? Yes.
Is buying and possessing Kratos wrong? No. Why? Because Kratos is NOT a person. He does not exist outside code embedded in a disk or saved in a hard drive. If you disagree, feel free to sue Sony for human trafficking (demigod trafficking?).
With the definition of objectification in mind--and paying SPECIAL attention to the word "PERSON"--Jim's video is simply an assertion that female gamers aren't getting the entertainment they desire out of the video game industry, which is a problem but is a far fucking cry from the dehumanization of the entire gender. Believe it or not, video games are not responsible for prostitution, sex trade, domestic violence, rape, the glass ceiling, the wage gap, etc., so please stop making videos to suggest so.