According to Roger Caillois, play is ''an occasion of
pure waste: waste of time, energy, ingenuity, skill, and
often of money.'' In spite of this - or because of it -
play constitutes an essential element of human social
and spiritual development. In this classic study,
Caillois defines play as a free and voluntary activity
that occurs in a pure space, isolated and protected from
the rest of life. Play is uncertain, since the outcome
may not be foreseen, and it is governed by rules that
provide a level playing field for all participants. In
its most basic form, play consists of finding a response
to the opponent's action - or to the play situation -
that is free within the limits set by the rules.
Caillois qualifies types of games - according to whether
competition, chance, simulation, or vertigo (being
physically out of control) is dominant - and ways of
playing, ranging from the unrestricted improvisation
characteristic of children's play to the disciplined
pursuit of solutions to gratuitously difficult puzzles.
Caillois also examines the means by which games become
part of daily life and ultimately contribute to various
cultures their most characteristic customs and
institutions.Presented here in Meyer Barash's superb
English translation, ''Man, Play and Games'' is a
companion volume to Caillois' ''Man and the
Sacred''. |
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