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Play in the Age of Goethe: Theories, Narratives, and Practices of Play around 1800

English

We are inundated with game play today. Digital devices offer opportunities to play almost anywhere and anytime. No matter our age, gender, social, cultural, or educational backgroundwe play. Play in the Age of Goethe: Theories, Narratives, and Practices of Play around 1800 is the first book-length work to explore how the modern discourse of play was first shaped during this pivotal period (approximately 1770-1830). The eleven chapters illuminate critical developments in the philosophy, pedagogy, psychology, politics, and poetics of play as evident in the work of major authors of the period including Lessing, Goethe, Kant, Schiller, Pestalozzi, Jacobi, Tieck, Jean Paul, Schleiermacher, and Fröbel. While drawing on more recent theories of play by thinkers such as Jean Piaget, Donald Winnicott, Jost Trier, Gregory Bateson, Jacques Derrida, Thomas Henricks, and Patrick Jagoda, the volume shows the debates around play in German letters of this period to be far richer and more complex than previously thought, as well as more relevant for our current engagement with play. Indeed, modern debates about what constitutes good rather than bad practices of play can be traced to these foundational discourses.

Published by Bucknell University Press. Distributed worldwide by Rutgers University Press.  See more
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A32=Christian P. WeberA32=Christiane FreyA32=David MartynA32=Ian F. McNeelyA32=Michael PowersA32=Nicholas RennieA32=Patricia Anne SimpsonA32=Samuel HeidepriemAge Group_Uncategorizedautomatic-updateB01=Edgar LandgrafB01=Elliott SchreiberCategory1=Non-FictionCategory=DSBDCategory=DSGCOP=United StatesDelivery_Delivery within 10-20 working daysLanguage_EnglishPA=AvailablePrice_€100 and abovePS=Activesoftlaunch
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Product Details
  • Weight: 481g
  • Dimensions: 152 x 229mm
  • Publication Date: 14 Aug 2020
  • Publisher: Bucknell University PressU.S.
  • Publication City/Country: United States
  • Language: English
  • ISBN13: 9781684482078

About

EDGAR LANDGRAF is a professor of German at Bowling Green State University in Ohio. He studied philosophy and literary theory in Zurich Chicago and Baltimore. In addition to play studies his research interests include: critical improvisation studies; German Romanticism; eighteenth- and nineteenth-century German literature aesthetics and philosophy; sociological approaches to literature; neo-cybernetics posthumanism and Nietzsche.ELLIOTT SCHREIBER is an associate professor of German studies at Vassar College in New York. He is author of The Space of Autonomy: Karl Philipp Moritz and the Topography of Modernity as well as articles on numerous authors of the eighteenth and nineteenth centuries. He is currently at work on a book that investigates the rise of the discourse of imaginative play in Enlightenment and Romantic pedagogy and its development through the genre of the German literary fairy tale.

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