The “hacker” figure has ascended rapidly within the collective imagination, embodying technical wizardry and societal anxieties about the digital world. This article analyzes the shifting portrayals of the hacker archetype across seminal films, TV shows, and computer games from the 1980s to the present. Rather than a simple, straightforward evolution, we argue that media representations built a complex narrative arc by drawing from, and selectively amplify, a consistent repertoire of hacker tropes. By analyzing cinematic narratives alongside the interactive affordances of contemporaneous games, this transmedia analysis illustrates how specific historical moments, like Cold War paranoia and contemporary surveillance capitalism, caused certain tropes to be foregrounded while others recede in the background. The analysis ultimately leads to a complex and nuanced return to the origins, where the layered reactivation of the “outcast” trope, now fused with deep explorations of mental health and a systemic societal critique, reflects the deep anxieties of our hyper-connected age.
Roberto Dillon (Thu,) studied this question.