Homo Ludens
Many aspects of our life are made up of play; be it football, implicit dress codes or social etiquette at work. The idea of the homo ludens (Latin for 'playing man') is a view of man in which man is first and foremost a playing being.
The oldest known mention of the term is the title of the book Homo Ludens, a 1938 general cultural-scientific work by the Dutch historian Johan Huizinga, who became well-known for his cultural-historical magnum about the Middle Ages (Herfsttijd der Middeleeuwen). As the title suggests, Homo Ludens is about the importance of the play element of culture and society. Play as a necessary condition for the production of culture. In 2012 Studium Generale organized the one-day festival Play! which ranged from the educational to artistic and serious games, from the political to the erotic game and from improvisation as a game to ‘make belief’.
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video – 27 apr. 2012
Singer-songwriter Frank van der Geest tijdens Entre Act
video – 27 apr. 2012
Christopher Dell: Improvisation as Technology
video – 27 apr. 2012
Lezing Joost Raessens: Spelenderwijs – op weg naar een ludische mediacultuur
video – 27 apr. 2012
René van Engelen van Dropstuff: Urban Screen-Based Games
video – 27 apr. 2012
Lezing Martine Delfos: Homo ludens, homo virtualis
video – 27 apr. 2012
Arjan Ederveen geïnterviewd door Raoul Heertje
video – 27 apr. 2012
Lezing Tijs Goldschmidt : Spelen is doen alsof
video – 27 apr. 2012
Willem de Ridder: Fluxus – het Leven een Spel
agenda
one day festival
Zwolle
Play!
Play! Event on the actual meaning of play in art, science and society.
27 apr. 2012Zwolle