Homo Ludens


Homo Ludens is a book originally published in Dutch in 1938 by Dutch historian and cultural theorist Johan Huizinga.
It discusses the importance of the play element of culture and society. Huizinga suggests that play is primary to and a necessary condition of the generation of culture. The Latin word ludens is the present active participle of the verb ludere, which itself is cognate with the noun ludus. Ludus has no direct equivalent in English, as it simultaneously refers to sport, play, school, and practice.

Reception

Homo Ludens is an important part of the history of game studies. It influenced later scholars of play, like Roger Caillois. The concept of the magic circle was inspired by Homo Ludens.

Foreword controversy

Huizinga makes it clear in the foreword of his book that he means the play element of culture, and not the play element in culture. He writes that he titled the initial lecture the book is based on "The Play Element of Culture". This title was repeatedly corrected to "in" Culture, a revision he objected to.
The English version modified the subtitle of the book to "A Study of the Play-Element in Culture", contradicting Huizinga's stated intention. The translator explains in a footnote in the Foreword, "Logically, of course, Huizinga is correct; but as English prepositions are not governed by logic I have retained the more euphonious ablative in this sub-title."

Contents

I. Nature and significance of play as a cultural phenomenon


Play is older than culture, for culture, however inadequately defined, always presupposes human society, and animals have not waited for man to teach them their playing.

Huizinga begins by making it clear that animals played before humans. One of the most significant aspects of play is that it is fun.
Huizinga identifies 5 characteristics that play must have:
  1. Play is free, is in fact freedom.
  2. Play is not "ordinary" or "real" life.
  3. Play is distinct from "ordinary" life both as to locality and duration.
  4. Play creates order, is order. Play demands order absolute and supreme.
  5. Play is connected with no material interest, and no profit can be gained from it.

    II. The play concept as expressed in language


Word and idea are not born of scientific or logical thinking but of creative language, which means of innumerable languages—for this act of "conception" has taken place over and over again.

Huizinga has much to say about the words for play in different languages. Perhaps the most extraordinary remark concerns the Latin language. "It is remarkable that ludus, as the general term for play, has not only not passed into the Romance languages but has left hardly any traces there, so far as I can see... We must leave to one side the question whether the disappearance of ludus and ludere is due to phonetic or to semantic causes."
Of all the possible uses of the word "play" Huizinga specifically mentions the equation of play with, on the one hand, "serious strife", and on the other, "erotic applications".

Play-category, play-concept, play-function, play-word in selected languages

Huizinga attempts to classify the words used for play in a variety of natural languages.
The chapter title uses "play-concept" to describe such words. Other words used with the "play-" prefix are play-function and play-form. The order in which examples are given in natural languages is as follows:
; Greek
;Sanskrit
;Chinese
;Blackfoot
;Japanese
; Semitic languages
;Latin

III. Play and contest as civilizing functions


The view we take in the following pages is that culture arises in the form of play, that it is played from the very beginning... Social life is endued with supra-biological forms, in the shape of play, which enhances its value.

Huizinga does not mean that "play turns into culture". Rather, he sets play and culture side by side, talks about their "twin union", but insists that "play is primary".

IV. Play and law


The judge's wig, however, is more than a mere relic of antiquated professional dress.
Functionally it has close connections with the dancing masks of savages.
It transforms the wearer into another "being".
And it is by no means the only very ancient feature which the strong sense of tradition
so peculiar to the British has preserved in law.
The sporting element and the humour so much in evidence in British legal practice
is one of the basic features of law in archaic society.

Three play-forms in the lawsuit

Huizinga puts forward the idea that there are "three play-forms in the lawsuit" and that these forms
can be deduced by comparing practice today with "legal proceedings in archaic society":
  1. the game of chance,
  2. the contest,
  3. the verbal battle.

    V. Play and war


Until recently the "law of nations" was generally held to constitute such a system of limitation, recognizing as it did the ideal of a community with rights and claims for all, and expressly separating the state of war—by declaring it—from peace on the one hand and criminal violence on the other. It remained for the theory of "total war" to banish war's cultural function and extinguish the last
vestige of the play-element.

This chapter occupies a certain unique position not only in the book but more obviously in Huizinga's own life. The first Dutch version was published in 1938. The Beacon Press book is based on the combination of Huizinga's English text and the German text, published in Switzerland 1944. Huizinga died in 1945.
  1. One wages war to obtain a decision of holy validity.
  2. An armed conflict is as much a mode of justice as divination or a legal proceeding.
  3. War itself might be regarded as a form of divination.
The chapter contains some pleasantly surprising remarks:
  1. One might call society a game in the formal sense, if one bears in mind that such a game is the living principle of all civilization.
  2. In the absence of the play-spirit civilization is impossible.

    VI. Playing and knowing


For archaic man, doing and daring are power, but knowing is magical power. For him all particular knowledge
is sacred knowledge—esoteric and wonder-working wisdom, because any knowing is directly related to the
cosmic order itself.

The riddle-solving and death-penalty motif features strongly in the chapter.

Poiesis, in fact, is a play-function. It proceeds within the play-ground of the mind, in a world of its own which the mind creates for it. There things have a different physiognomy from the one they wear in "ordinary life", and are bound by ties other than those of logic and causality.

For Huizinga, the "true appellation of the archaic poet is vates, the possessed, the God-smitten, the raving one". Of the many examples he gives, one might choose Unferd who appears in Beowulf.

VIII. The elements of mythopoiesis


As soon as the effect of a metaphor consists in describing things or events in terms of life
and movement, we are on the road to personification. To represent the incorporeal and the inanimate
as a person is the soul of all myth-making and nearly all poetry.

Mythopoiesis is literally myth-making.

IX. Play-forms in philosophy


At the centre of the circle we are trying to describe with our idea of play there stands the figure of the Greek sophist. He may be regarded as an extension of the central figure in archaic cultural life who appeared before us successively as the prophet, medicine-man, seer, thaumaturge and poet and whose best designation is vates.

X. Play-forms in art


Wherever there is a catch-word ending in -ism we are hot on the tracks of a play-community.

Huizinga has already established an indissoluble bond between play and poetry. Now he recognizes that "the same is true, and in even higher degree, of the bond between play and music"
However, when he turns away from "poetry, music and dancing to the plastic arts" he "finds the connections with play becoming less obvious". But here Huizinga is in the past. He cites the examples of the "architect, the sculptor, the painter, draughtsman, ceramist, and decorative artist" who in spite of her/his "creative impulse" is ruled by the discipline, "always subjected to the skill and proficiency of the forming hand".
On the other hand, if one turns away from the "making of works of art to the manner in which they are received in the social milieu", then the picture changes completely. It is this social reception, the struggle of the new "-ism" against the old "-ism", which characterises the play.

XI. Western civilization sub specie ludi



We have to conclude, therefore, that civilization is, in its earliest phases, played.
It does not come from play like a baby detaching itself from the womb:
it arises in and as play, and never leaves it.

XII. Play-element in contemporary civilization


In American politics it is even more evident. Long before the two-party system had reduced itself to two gigantic teams whose political differences were hardly discernible to an outsider, electioneering in America had developed into a kind of national sport.

Quotations