ABSTRACT

To understand play, we need a bottom-up phenomenology of play. This phenomenology highlights the paradox that it is the players who play the game, but it is also the game which makes us players. Yet what is it that plays us, when we play? Do we play the game, or does the game play us? These questions concern the relation between the playing subject and play as something larger than the individual – play as craft, play as rhythm, play between normality and otherness, even play as religion, as a sense of spiritual play between self and other.

This goes deeper than the welfare-political or educational intention to make people play or play more, or to advise individuals to play in a correct and useful way. Exploring topics such as identity, otherness, and disability, as well as activities including skiing, yoga, dance and street sport, this interdisciplinary study continues the work of the late Henning Eichberg and sheds new light on the questions that play at the borders of philosophy, anthropology, and the sociology of sport and leisure.

Play in Philosophy and Social Thought is a fascinating resource for students of philosophy of sport, cultural studies, sport sciences and anthropological studies. It is also a thought-provoking read for sport and play philosophers, sociologists, anthropologists, cultural studies scholars, and practitioners working with play.

chapter |9 pages

Introduction

If the game plays the player …

part I|3 pages

Play and identity

chapter Chapter 1|35 pages

Laughter of the Pygmies on the racetrack, 1904

12Making the “others” play 1

chapter Chapter 2|28 pages

Gliding body – sitting body

Playing we-identity and religion 1

chapter Chapter 3|32 pages

Mass plays and social movements

Playing social identity 1

part II|3 pages

Play and un-normal normality

chapter Chapter 4|16 pages

Dancing joy and dancing mania

110Rhythmic possession 1

chapter Chapter 5|13 pages

Moving and playing with disability

– and what is normal? 1

part III|3 pages

Play and craft

chapter Chapter 6|14 pages

Parkour

142Between craftsmanship and playfulness 1

part IV|2 pages

Critical method

chapter Chapter 7|10 pages

Do we need a definition of play?

159Re-encounter with philosophies of games 1

chapter Chapter 9|18 pages

Play, games, sport, production

The study of configurations 1

chapter Chapter 10|8 pages

Play with words, play with numbers

About academic games 1

part V|3 pages

… and play down here

chapter Chapter 11|19 pages

Nisser

210The playful small people of Denmark 1

chapter Chapter 12|7 pages

The nose

A playground in the midst of the human face

chapter |6 pages

Conclusion

The playful human being, a challenge to philosophical anthropology