ISBN-13: 9781932698442 / Angielski / Miękka / 2012 / 112 str.
In the nineteenth century, Marx rejected the notion of homo sapiens, offering instead homo faber to indicate how consciousness follows from the primary activity of making. Against this, a certain ludic tradition has imagined a homo ludens, humans defined through their relationship with games and play. Cabinet 45 features Joshua Glenn on H.G. Wells' -Floor Games-; D. Graham Burnett on games played by game theorists; Barbara Levine and Jessica Helfand on dexterity games; James Trainor on the lost world of -adventure- playgrounds; Dana Katz on Brian Eno and Peter Schmidt's -Oblique Strategies-; an interview with Bertell Ollman, inventor of the board game -Class Struggle-; and Jeff Dolven on poems as games. Elsewhere in the issue: Helen Larsson on the history of applause; Wayne Koestenbaum's legendary -Legend- column; Naomi Muller on eating the zoo animals in Berlin during World War II; Jeremy Crichton on -spite- houses; and much more.