Preface

Authors

Sarah Lynne Bowman
Uppsala University
https://orcid.org/0000-0003-1277-8787 (unauthenticated)
Elektra Diakolambrianou
Dragons' Nest, Institution for Counselling and Psychological Studies in Athens
Simon Brind
Avalon Larp Studio, British Broadcasting Corporation (BBC)

Synopsis

An introduction to the textbook, the project, and the positionality/reflexivity of the authors.

Author Biographies

Sarah Lynne Bowman, Uppsala University

Sarah Lynne Bowman is a scholar, game designer, and event organizer. She received her B.A. and M.A. from the University of Texas at Austin in Radio-Television-Film and her Ph.D. from the University of Texas at Dallas in Arts and Humanities. Bowman has taught in the Humanities, English, and Communication. Currently, she is an Associate Professor and Docent in Game Design at Uppsala University Campus Gotland. She formerly served as Coordinator for the Peace & Conflict Studies program at Austin Community College, where she teaches Humanities. Bowman is a founding member of the Transformative Play Initiative, who research analog role-playing games as vehicles for personal and social change. She co-edited The Wyrd Con Companion Book (2012-2015) and currently edits for the International Journal of Role-Playing and Nordiclarp.org. Bowman has co-organized several conferences, including Living Games (2014, 2016, 2018), Role-playing and Simulation and Education (2016, 2018), and the Transformative Play Initiative Seminar (2022). More information at sarahlynnebowman.com.

Elektra Diakolambrianou, Dragons' Nest, Institution for Counselling and Psychological Studies in Athens

Elektra Diakolambrianou (Ilektra Diakolamprianou) is a licensed psychologist and psychotherapist, a certified adult educator, and a larp designer. She has a B.Sc. in Psychology from Panteion University, a Pg.Dip. in Person-Centred Counselling from the University of Strathclyde, a Prof.Cert. in Art, Drama and Play Therapy from Edexcel, and is a European Certificate of Psychotherapy holder. Currently she is pursuing a M.A. in Creative Writing offered by the Hellenic Open University. A certified trainer of communication skills by Gordon Training International and member of the trainers’ pool of the Greek National Agency for Erasmus+ Youth 2014-2020, Elektra has had continuing education in cinematherapy, music therapy, bibliotherapy, therapeutic writing, gamification methods, game-based education, restorative justice, and social psychology. Since 2012, she has been working as a psychotherapist working with socially vulnerable groups, including: unaccompanied minors, refugees, immigrants, NEETs, unemployed people, former prisoners, and women. Since 2013, she has been an academic staff member at the Institution for Counselling and Psychological Studies in Athens. Her academic work emphasizes the potential of larp as a medium for personal development and psychotherapy. She is also a co-founder of the LARPifiers. Elektra
has experience in working as an emotional safety person in games and projects, as well as in curating larp designs for emotional safety.

Simon Brind, Avalon Larp Studio, British Broadcasting Corporation (BBC)

Simon Brind is a larp writer and academic from London, England. He received his Bachelor’s degree in English Literature from University College London, has a Master’s degree in Software Engineering from the University of Westminster, and a second Master’s in Creative Writing from Middlesex University. He completed his Ph.D. in 2023 at the Digital Cultures Research Centre at the University of the West of England. His thesis, Combat Narratology: Strategies for the Resolution of Narrative Crisis in Participatory Fiction, is available from the Digital Cultures Research Centre, (UWE), Bristol. His research looks at emergent narrative structures in participatory fiction and the tension between authorial and participant agency. He has been a larper since 1983, a larpwright since 1986, and is a founding member of Avalon Larp Studio. He has
worked on some of the largest and longest running larp systems in the UK as well as projects across Europe and North America.

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Published

January 24, 2025

Online ISSN

3035-7934

Print ISSN

3035-7594

How to Cite

(Ed.). (2025). Preface. In Transformative Role-playing Game Design: Vol. Transformative Play Research Series, 1 (pp. 14-18). Uppsala Scholarly Books. https://doi.org/10.33063/d5czz787