Video Games Meet Queer Activism Meet the Academy

Meet Danny McLaren
Person sitting on a couch smiling.

How do video games, queer activism and the academy connect? Through Danny McLaren.

Danny McLaren is an MA Student in the Gender Studies department, conducting their research in 鈥渜ueer and trans games studies鈥 or more specifically as Danny describes, they look 鈥渁t video games as tools of world-making.鈥 Danny explains world-making as 鈥渃reating pockets of spaces where queer people can exist in the virtual world.鈥 In other words, Danny explores how queer and trans video games can become spaces of resistance to the dominant gaming world that largely neglects queer characters or narratives. Danny came to this research because of their love for games and their desire to see themselves represented in the games. Danny says, 鈥淚 love games so intensely,鈥 but Danny goes onto contend that as a trans individual, 鈥淚 don鈥檛 see myself reflected in [dominant games]. I don鈥檛 see myself as any of these people, and I struggle to see myself even though I love gaming.鈥 For Danny, this research allows them to look at the intersections of technology and body and 鈥渃onsider what transness can look like when I鈥檓 not defined by my body.鈥 Danny recommends Ryan Rose Aceae鈥檚 or Anna Anthropy鈥檚 for anyone interested in checking out games that stray from the heteronormative and allow queer individuals to explore their gender and sexuality. 

While researching video games may seem obscure in some academic disciplines, Danny contends that it鈥檚 the perfect topic in the Gender Studies department. Danny claims, 鈥淕ender studies opens the door for you to write about everyday practices with a critical eye, even media that one might not assume to be academic media.鈥 For Danny, it was while they were completing their undergraduate degree in Gender Studies at Queen鈥檚 that they were allowed to experiment with video game analysis, ultimately opening Danny up to the topic. Danny retells the experience they had in the classroom, where their professor encouraged them to stray from the academic norm, 鈥淲e were supposed to do book reviews and I was like I want to do, instead of a book review analysis, I want to do a game. Can I do a game? And [the professor] was like, yeah you can do a game, of course. A game has enough text. It鈥檚 literature.鈥 Danny also speaks admirably about the department as a whole and the support it has for its students, 鈥淚 feel loved and accepted and supported by this department.鈥 Danny also adds, 鈥淭hey respect me as a thinker and an academic even though I鈥檓 just beginning.鈥 Danny鈥檚 admiration for the department is one of the reasons why they decided to return to Queen鈥檚 for their MA, 鈥淚 decided to stay because I had never felt so at home than I do in the Gender Studies department.鈥

Aside from scholarly work, Danny is also a student advocate and poet. Danny has sat on the board of , a 鈥渘on-hierarchical collective student activist group [that] does anti-oppressive, decolonial and anti-racist work鈥 since their second year of undergrad. Danny enjoys their work at Levana because it鈥檚 a 鈥渟pace to create and be involved in activist social justice projects.鈥 In addition to their activist work, Danny is also a published poet. Danny often writes about trans existence and resistance. One of their poems, about a drag queen, .

To learn more about grad studies in Gender Studies, please visit their website.