The American Ghoul

dc.bibliographicCitation.article12
dc.bibliographicCitation.volume77
dc.contributor.authorWischert-Zielke, Moritz
dc.date.accessioned2025-12-08T09:10:06Z
dc.date.available2025-12-08T09:10:06Z
dc.date.issued2025
dc.description.abstractThis essay explores how the Fallout game series reimagines the zombie through its figure of the ghoul, questioning its role as a mirror of American racial politics. Unlike the generic video game zombie, which many titles use as a ubiquitous antagonist, Fallout’s ghoul foregrounds ongoing processes of racialization and de-racialization, showing how play, history, race, science fiction, and monstrosity intersect. Drawing on the cultural genealogy of zombie figures, the analysis details how the ghoul’s uncanny status as posthuman and monstrous Other invites players into affective and ethical entanglements that may reveal the persistence of racial antagonisms. While encounters with ghouls tend to expose the racist basis of xenophobia and anti-ghoul bigotry in Fallout 3 and New Vegas, the later titles increasingly downplay or erase these dimensions. By tracing how ghouls oscillate between individualized voices and faceless hordes, the essay shows how game design mirrors larger cultural struggles to confront or suppress race. Situating Fallout’s shifting portrayals against the backdrop of US race relations, ranging from the Bush era’s War on Terror to Trump’s populist xenophobia, it reads the figure as a contested and complex site for America’s haunted racial unconscious.
dc.identifier.doi10.18422/77-2540
dc.identifier.urihttp://resolver.sub.uni-goettingen.de/purl?fidaac-11858/3728
dc.language.isoeng
dc.relation.issn2750-7327
dc.relation.journalNew American Studies Journal
dc.relation.journalaltA Forum
dc.rightsL::CC BY 4.0
dc.subject.ddcddc:305
dc.subject.ddcddc:700
dc.subject.fieldamericanstudies
dc.subject.fieldpopularculture
dc.subject.fieldmediastudies
dc.subject.fieldculturalstudies
dc.titleThe American Ghoul
dc.title.alternativeRace in the Fallout Games in the Context of US Race Relations
dc.title.specialissueAesthetics
dc.typearticle
dc.type.versionpublishedVersion
dspace.entity.typePublication

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