The Key: Abstraction, Embodiment, and Proper Distance within the Virtual Home

The emergence of virtual reality (VR) humanitarian filmmaking as a genre over the past ten years has generated a large body of critical debate around the efficacy and ethics of VR as a tool for generating empathy towards marginalised communities. Whilst numerous studies have indicated the potential...

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Main Author: Conn Holohan
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: University College Cork 2024-02-01
Series:Alphaville: Journal of Film and Screen Media
Subjects:
Online Access:https://www.alphavillejournal.com/Issue26/HTML/ArticleHolohan.html
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author Conn Holohan
author_facet Conn Holohan
author_sort Conn Holohan
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description The emergence of virtual reality (VR) humanitarian filmmaking as a genre over the past ten years has generated a large body of critical debate around the efficacy and ethics of VR as a tool for generating empathy towards marginalised communities. Whilst numerous studies have indicated the potential for VR to impact empathy levels of end users, there have been recurrent critiques of the power dynamics of VR production, as well as the value of empathy as a means of producing social change. Lacking in these discussions has been a detailed consideration of VR aesthetics and the extent to which stylistic strategies impact audience positioning. Through the example of the animated VR experience The Key (Celine Tricart, 2019), this article will explore experience design in the context of ethical debates around humanitarian VR. As an interactive, narrative experience that addresses themes of loss and displacement, The Key can be productively analysed in relation to both VR ethics and wider cultural understandings of home and belonging. Responding to ethical debates around proximity within immersive experiences, the article will examine aesthetic strategies within The Key for ensuring what Roger Silverstone has labelled “proper distance” between the user and the virtually represented space. Through its use of visual abstraction and simplification, as well as the limited physical interaction it affords with its virtual world, the virtual home of The Key will be understood as a site of resistance to universalising narratives of home, one which invites critical reflection on the factors that determine our access to shelter.
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spelling doaj.art-752a3a7031d54347945a9fba6dbdaf142024-03-08T09:45:18ZengUniversity College CorkAlphaville: Journal of Film and Screen Media2009-40782024-02-012614115310.33178/alpha.26.09The Key: Abstraction, Embodiment, and Proper Distance within the Virtual HomeConn Holohan0https://orcid.org/0000-0001-6795-8561University of GalwayThe emergence of virtual reality (VR) humanitarian filmmaking as a genre over the past ten years has generated a large body of critical debate around the efficacy and ethics of VR as a tool for generating empathy towards marginalised communities. Whilst numerous studies have indicated the potential for VR to impact empathy levels of end users, there have been recurrent critiques of the power dynamics of VR production, as well as the value of empathy as a means of producing social change. Lacking in these discussions has been a detailed consideration of VR aesthetics and the extent to which stylistic strategies impact audience positioning. Through the example of the animated VR experience The Key (Celine Tricart, 2019), this article will explore experience design in the context of ethical debates around humanitarian VR. As an interactive, narrative experience that addresses themes of loss and displacement, The Key can be productively analysed in relation to both VR ethics and wider cultural understandings of home and belonging. Responding to ethical debates around proximity within immersive experiences, the article will examine aesthetic strategies within The Key for ensuring what Roger Silverstone has labelled “proper distance” between the user and the virtually represented space. Through its use of visual abstraction and simplification, as well as the limited physical interaction it affords with its virtual world, the virtual home of The Key will be understood as a site of resistance to universalising narratives of home, one which invites critical reflection on the factors that determine our access to shelter.https://www.alphavillejournal.com/Issue26/HTML/ArticleHolohan.htmlvirtual realityempathydocumentaryaestheticshome
spellingShingle Conn Holohan
The Key: Abstraction, Embodiment, and Proper Distance within the Virtual Home
Alphaville: Journal of Film and Screen Media
virtual reality
empathy
documentary
aesthetics
home
title The Key: Abstraction, Embodiment, and Proper Distance within the Virtual Home
title_full The Key: Abstraction, Embodiment, and Proper Distance within the Virtual Home
title_fullStr The Key: Abstraction, Embodiment, and Proper Distance within the Virtual Home
title_full_unstemmed The Key: Abstraction, Embodiment, and Proper Distance within the Virtual Home
title_short The Key: Abstraction, Embodiment, and Proper Distance within the Virtual Home
title_sort key abstraction embodiment and proper distance within the virtual home
topic virtual reality
empathy
documentary
aesthetics
home
url https://www.alphavillejournal.com/Issue26/HTML/ArticleHolohan.html
work_keys_str_mv AT connholohan thekeyabstractionembodimentandproperdistancewithinthevirtualhome
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