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Play is a fundamental performance humans engage in to help further understand approaches and possibilities for reality, this is essential for adaptation to the evolving environment.
“Play actions thus offer a critique of conventional understandings of purpose and need, calling for a different way of thinking about these matters.” (Rojek 1995)
Play is fundamental to the modern day being for a variety of cognitive, behavioral, cultural purposes. Play is not frivolous, it retains a challenging and provoking importance throughout a lifetime.
The urban public landscape maintains a significant role in the health of society today, promoting a space to freely search and test interactions of love, esteem, and self-actualization the urban public landscape offers a possibility of engaging in the diversity of the world around as a means of understanding it. (Maslow 1943)
Encoded within the urban landscape, built signals direct us on how we are supposed to act physically and mentally in the space, what is allowed, what is not, what is yes, and what is no. Some spatial features blur this boundary of normative bodily behavior in space. This thesis explores that blurred or gray area of acceptable behavior in order to create dynamic interactions, conversations, and frame critical issues within the city of Detroit.
Through theoretical research on the underpinnings of what play is, analysis of urban conditions and the phenomenon of play, qualitative analysis of the play concept in various facets in the urban public realm, this thesis will distill the core signals of play and put these signals into motion in the built environment as a means of fostering interaction in the urban public realm.
Huizinga, Johan. Homo Ludens: a Study of the Play Element in Culture. Angelico Press, 2016.
Lees, Loretta, ed. The Emancipatory City?: Paradoxes and Possibilities. London: SAGE Publications Ltd, 200 4.
Rosoff, Amy. “The Reality of Unreality: Using Imagination as a Teaching Tool.” The English Journal, vol. 96, no. 3, 2007, pp. 58– 62.
JSTOR, www.jstor.org/stable/30047296. Accessed 9 Sept. 2020. |
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