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Description
Is philosophy a playful pursuit?
This book's central argument is that playfulness is an essential quality of philosophical practice, and that there is something essentially philosophical about play. Ways of doing philosophy well invariably require the same wonder, hope, co-operation and positive freedom that define healthy modes of play.
Matthew McLennan explores this intrinsic connection in the way that philosophy and play shed light upon one another through three core concepts: the realities of play define what it is and how it manifests; the rules of play determine how it functions; the 'what comes next' of play depends on what we want or hope to find in it. Together, these meditations explain how both play and philosophy are essentially oriented towards the indefinite, the infinite and the possible. Working across disciplinary boundaries and calling on an eclectic range of thinkers, this paradigm-shifting approach redefines how we understand the doing of philosophy and how we perceive the traditions that underpin it.
Accessibility Information
Additional accessibility information
- PDF/UA-2, 1.4
- accessibility@bloomsbury.com
Hazards
The publication contains no hazards
Support for non-visual reading
Has alternative text descriptions for images
Navigation
- Page list to go to pages from the print source version
- Elements such as headings, tables, etc for structured navigation
- All or substantially all textual matter is arranged in a single logical reading order
Table of Contents
1. Realities, Rules, and What Comes Next
2. Excursus: Thinking, Playing, with Others
Part One: Realities - The What of Play
3. Child Development: Playing and Reality Revisited
4. Provisional Ontologies: Play beyond Childhood
5. Excursus: River Pickles, or: American Yokai and Multinaturalism
Part Two: Rules - The How of Play
6. Fitting and Guiding
7. Searching
8. Bending, Subverting, and Changing the Game
9. Excursus: Tomahtoes on Bread, or: A Game in Search of, and running from, its own Rules
Part Three: What Comes Next - Desire, Hope, and Fear in Play
10. Affects of Linking: Desire, Hope, and Fear
11. Situating and Repairing Linking
12. Excursus: The Improvisor's stage is never Neutral
Conclusion: Philosophy Militant, Vulnerable, and Playful
Product details
| Published | 25 Jun 2026 |
|---|---|
| Format | Ebook (PDF) |
| Edition | 1st |
| Pages | 208 |
| ISBN | 9781350469051 |
| Imprint | Bloomsbury Academic |
| Publisher | Bloomsbury Publishing |
About the contributors
Reviews
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Matthew McLennan's Philosophy and Play is a compelling dialogue between play and philosophy that raises vital questions about the meaning, significance, and ontology of each. McLennan's assertion of the subjectivity of play is particularly welcome, undermining the many attempts that invoke it as metaphor and illustration without considering its distinctiveness. This, then, is an important philosophical assessment of play and playful assessment of philosophy that is both sceptical of many of the conventions of analyses of play while challenging us to rethink both play and philosophy as places to make and make sense of a world in motion.
Malcolm MacLean, Academic Director of the Doctoral College, University of Wales Trinity St David, UK and Senior Research Associate, University of Gibraltar, Gibraltar
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McLennan manages that rare accomplishment of combining informality, accessibility, and deep scholarship, ranging across myriad thinkers, writers, concepts, and practices. Nothing and nobody is let off the hook, not even himself. Play, philosophy and the authors he engages with are all subject to playful, philosophical, respectful, generous, and serious scrutiny. For those who enjoy playing with philosophy, philosophizing about play, and musing on the relations between the two, this book is a gem.
Wendy Russell, Senior Research Fellow, University of Gloucestershire, UK

























