Homo Ludens

Vom Ursprung der Kultur im Spiel

Paperback, 255 pages

German language

Published July 29, 1991

ISBN:
978-3-499-55435-3
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Goodreads:
233222

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4 stars (6 reviews)

Homo Ludens is a book originally published in Dutch in 1938 by Dutch historian and cultural theorist Johan Huizinga. It discusses the importance of the play element of culture and society. Huizinga suggests that play is primary to and a necessary (though not sufficient) condition of the generation of culture. The Latin word ludens is the present active participle of the verb ludere, which itself is cognate with the noun ludus. Ludus has no direct equivalent in English, as it simultaneously refers to sport, play, school, and practice.

5 editions

Review of 'Homo Ludens' on Goodreads

3 stars

1) ''Play is older than culture, for culture, however inadequately defined, always presupposes human society, and animals have not waited for man to teach them their playing.''

2) ''As a culture proceeds, either progressing or regressing, the original relationship we have postulated between play and non-play does not remain static. As a rule the play-element gradually recedes into the background, being absorbed for the most part in the sacred sphere. The remainder crystallizes as knowledge: folklore, poetry, philosophy, or in the various forms of judicial and social life.''

3) ''All knowledge---and this naturally includes philosophy---is polemical by nature, and polemics cannot be divorced from agonistics. Epochs in which great new treasures of the mind come to tlight are generally epochs of violent controversy. Such was the 17th century, when Natural Science underwent a glorious efflorescence coinciding with the weakening of authority and antiquity, and the decay of faith. Everything is …

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