In 1922, Bronislaw Malinowski’s Argonauts of the Western Pacific changed anthropology forever, introducing the world to "thick description" and the rigors of deep fieldwork. A century later, researcher Michael Hoffman is bringing that text into the future.
In this episode, Jamin Warren sits down with Hoffman—a computer scientist and anthropologist at one of Germany’s premier supercomputing centers—to discuss his creation of the "Anthrogame." By feeding classic ethnographic texts into Large Language Models, Hoffman has built a playable Dungeon Master version of Trobriand society, where players navigate the complex social and economic rituals of the South Pacific.
We explore the intersection of worldbuilding and fieldwork, the frustration of academic reach, and whether AI can turn dense monographs into "appetizers" that make us more curious about the real world. Is anthropology the original worldbuilding discipline? And why haven't game designers tapped into the "thick description" of real cultures?
Host: Jamin Warren
Guest: Michael Hoffman (Leibniz-Rechenzentrum)
- (00:00) - Introduction: The Decline of Reading
- (00:27) - Anthropology and AI: A New Frontier
- (01:27) - Michael Hoffman's Journey
- (02:40) - The Intersection of Anthropology and Game Design
- (28:57) - Cultural Representation in Pedagogy
- (29:33) - Malinowski and the Argonauts of the Western Pacific
- (34:47) - Developing an AI-Powered Text Adventure Game
- (46:22) - Challenges and Future of AI in Anthropology
Hosted by Jamin Warren. Music by Nick Sylvester.
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What is The Killscreen Podcast?
Jamin Warren founded Killscreen as well as Gameplayarts, an organization dedicated to the education and practice of game-based arts and culture. He has produced events such as the Versions conference for VR arts and creativity, in partnership with NEW INC. Warren also programmed the first Tribeca Games Festival, the groundbreaking Arcade at the Museum of Modern Art, and the Kill Screen Festival, which Mashable called "the TED of videogames." Additionally, he has served as an advisor for the Museum of Modern Art's design department, acted as cluster chair for the Gaming category for the Webbys, and hosted Game/Show for PBS Digital Studios.
