Should we take the idea of play seriously? Since the publication
of Huizinga's "Homo Ludens" in 1938, a provocative literature has
developed in philosophy and social science that does. Combs argues
that we should understand play both as a generic concept with
considerable power to explain human activity, and as a contemporary
procept that demystifies some of the puzzling trends and
innovations emerging in the quickly developing new social world of
the 21st century.
Combs explores the thesis that play has a central role in our
understanding of human activity and social and political
organization in the new millennium. He argues that the human desire
for play is strong and given the continuation of certain major
historical innovations now shaping the world, it may well be that
21st-century people will increasingly exercise their desire for
play and that the world will increasingly be organized around the
principle and practice of play. It may now seem a truism that
people prefer to have fun, but that has not always been the case.
If, as Combs argues, the preference for fun is becoming central to
human activity, we need to explore why that preference is becoming
dominant and what kind of social organization and consequences such
a change entails. A provocative look at social change in the 20th
century that will be of interest to scholars, students, and
researchers of sociology and anthropology.
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