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Play and Aesthetics in Ancient Greece

Play and Aesthetics in Ancient Greece

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Stephen E. Kidd
Cambridge University Press, 5/9/2019
EAN 9781108492072, ISBN10: 110849207X

Hardcover, 244 pages, 23.5 x 15.8 x 1.8 cm
Language: English

What is art's relationship to play? Those interested in this question tend to look to modern philosophy for answers, but, as this book shows, the question was already debated in antiquity by luminaries like Plato and Aristotle. Over the course of eight chapters, this book contextualizes those debates, and demonstrates their significance for theoretical problems today. Topics include the ancient child psychology at the root of the ancient Greek word for 'play' (paidia), the numerous toys that have survived from antiquity, and the meaning of play's conceptual opposite, the 'serious' (spoudaios). What emerges is a concept of play markedly different from the one we have inherited from modernity. Play is not a certain set of activities which unleashes a certain feeling of pleasure; it is rather a certain feeling of pleasure that unleashes the activities we think of as 'play'. As such, it offers a new set of theoretical challenges.

Acknowledgments
List of abbreviations
Introduction
1. The Pais of Paizō
children, intoxication, and play in ancient psycho-physiology
2. Why Plato needs play
3. Plato's play and the tragic paradox
4. What do pleasure-objects do? An inquiry into toys
5. Aristotle's demotion of play
6. Play vs. mimesis in Aristotle's aesthetics
7. Serious play as goal-oriented play
8. The value of serious things before and after death
Conclusions
toward a pleasure-model of play
Bibliography
Index.