Tip Jar

Pay 4 Play?

Tip Jar

Play Ethic Widget

  • Get this widget from Widgetbox

Glasgow Time

my del.icio.us

May 2008

Sun Mon Tue Wed Thu Fri Sat
        1 2 3
4 5 6 7 8 9 10
11 12 13 14 15 16 17
18 19 20 21 22 23 24
25 26 27 28 29 30 31
Blog powered by TypePad
Member since 10/2003

Tuesday, February 13, 2007

True Mutations

True_mutations Thrilled to find that my 2001 interview with the estimable left cyber-libertarian R.U.Sirius has made it to a new paperback out in the US, called True Mutations. I'm in there (talking about play) with many other highly (dis)reputable neophiliacs - indeed in my section, 'An Open Source for the Self', I am sandwiched in between Genesis P. Orridge, the late Robert Anton Wilson, Richard Metzger, Daniel Pinchbeck, Howard Bloom and D.J.Spooky. I have never felt so happy to be among such peers (though just slightly creeped out also).

R.U. is also a burgeoning podcast titan, with his shows on the Mondo Globo Network, which are feeding automatically to my iPod as I speak. His blog, Ten Zen Monkeys, is a superior entity also. Anything he does is thoroughly recommended - his personal mix of stoner diffuseness, and Frankfurt-school analytics, is quite irresistible.

Wednesday, December 06, 2006

My books of the year

My books of the year for the Sunday Herald (not online, so reproduced here):

A strange year of non-trendy reading, squeezed around musical projects. Barney Hoskyns' Hotel California: Singer-songwriters and Cocaine Cowboys in the L.A. Canyons 1967–1976 (Fourth Estate) does exactly what it says on the tin, and reminded me (like I needed reminding) of just how impure the sources of the purest pop can be. From Edinburgh University, Claire Colbrook's Gilles Deleuze: A Guide for the Perplexed (Continuum) also realizes its promise about the most difficult of modern French philosophers. And some fiction (though not enough): Jonathan Raban's Surveillance (Picador) is like Dickens revived to witness the Age of Terror; and Micheal Gardiner's Escalator (Polygon) is an elegant collection of short stories about life in Tokyo, from one of the most original minds in Scotland.

Wednesday, March 29, 2006

Surfing (the zeitgeist) in Brisbane

Logo Been here for a few days at the Brisbane Festival of Ideas, at which I'm speaking this Friday. This is my third trip to a major Australian city since the Play Ethic launched as a website in 2000 (Sydney in 2001, Melbourne in 2002), which is at least some evidence that its themes find resonance here. I'm preparing my lecture at the moment, which I'm intending to be a kind of assessment of the idea after nearly ten years of thinking about it - a pretty shocking realisation for me. (Should I change my tune, or sing it better? Hmm). I'll be posting it here on Friday, fully hotlinked, and with an invitation for as much commentary and response as possible.

In the meantime, here's some local press I've been doing:

Wednesday, March 15, 2006

Play Ethic out today in US

This is the official release date of the Play Ethic in the US - welcome to all and any readers. If you want to know more about the project, please visit the main website, or dive into this blog and its archives - the entries are organised by chapter theme.

Friday, September 30, 2005

South China on the PE

033048930502thumbzzz_1It's not exactly a startling critique, but still nice to know that the new paperback copy of the Play Ethic has made its way out to the South China Morning Post for a review (on extended post below).

Continue reading "South China on the PE" »

Sunday, September 04, 2005

Little black books for black times

034534184801_bo2204203200_pisitbdp500arrAlmost forgotten I'd written this, as part of the new paperback version of the PE's promotion - a long over-due (and far too short) appreciation of James Carse's Finite and Infinite Games as my 'Book of a Lifetime' (it has supplanted yet another small black book, Adorno's Minima Moralia, as my primary life-saving carry-around). The piece doesn't seem to be available online, so it's on extended post below.

I must admit, after our recent London Tube bombings, and particularly the mistaken assasination of Mr. Menezes, this quote from Minima on the bourgeois nature of walking (how Adornian) is all too relevant:

Running in the street conveys an impression of terror. The victim's fall is already mimed in his attempt to escape it. The position of the head, trying to hold itself up, is that of a drowning man, and the straining face grimaces as if under torture. He has to look ahead, can hardly glance back without stumbling, as if treading the shadow of a foe whose features freeze the limbs.

Once people ran from dangers that were too desperate to turn and face, and someone running after a bus unwittingly bears witness to past terror. Traffic regulations no longer need allow for wild animals, but they have not pacified running. It estranges us from bourgeois walking. The truth becomes visible that something is amiss with security, that the unleashed powers of life, be they mere vehicles, have to be escaped.

The body's habituation to walking as normal stems from the good old days. It was the bourgeois form of locomotion: physical demythologization, free of the spell of hieratic pacing, roofless wandering, breathless flight. Human dignity insisted on the right to walk, a rhythm not extorted from the body by command or terror. The walk, the stroll, were private ways of passing time, the heritage of the feudal promenade in the nineteenth century.

And here's some lefty satire to polish the insight off, thanks to Red Pepper magazine.

Continue reading "Little black books for black times" »

Saturday, August 06, 2005

The Play Ethic in Paperback and Academia

New_pe_cover A busy few months ahead for the Play Ethic - our mass paperback version of the book (with new cover, to the left) will be out on September 30th in the UK (buyable here on Amazon.co.uk). I've already done a few radio spots, and am hoping to place articles around the media over the next few weeks (see this interview in Ode magazine).

What's interesting is the increasing amount of academic interest in the Play Ethic. On extended post below is a review in a journal called Organisations and People - which happily describes the book as a 'modern classic' - and downloadable here (pdf) is a very in-depth treatment of 'Play at Work: questions of historical interpretation'. I'm digesting it slowly, but excitedly - and I'm most thrilled by their conclusion:

the new mixture of play and work is an epiphany of ethical inarticulacy which manifests itself at macro and micro-cultural levels. The way in which Kane, Carse and Csikszentmihalyi, for example, propose play as an infinite possibility of being and suggest that all life experiences should be turned into ‘infinite games’ is a cultural expression of this search for a way of leaving behind the 'space of experience' of finitude and reaching new horizons of ‘infinity’. In fact, it is this idea of a world in which ‘everything might be possible’ and in which everybody is entitled to endless enjoyment (what Bruckner calls ‘the utopia of fun’), in which youth is prolonged, and in which life itself will be delivered from suffering and even mortality (and why not? what else is the current investment of hope in the promises of genetic elucidation of man's biological being?) that Taylor suggests is the essence of what he terms ‘ethics of inarticulacy’.

Well, they get that right: the play ethic is, on one level, an attempt to help us cope with our increasing ability to control and 'play with' the fundamentals of our lives - social, material, technological and biological - by developing an ethic for these burgeoning powers.

Continue reading "The Play Ethic in Paperback and Academia" »

Wednesday, June 22, 2005

The Slacker Ethic at the ICA

Come along to the ICA tomorrow night, 7pm, Nash Room - I'll be on the panel at the following event:

The Slacker Ethic

The relentless wave of cost cutting in the corporate world in the last couple of decades has taken its toll on the protestant work ethic.  But if the work ethic has taken a battering amongst young people, what is there to replace it? Should we take our revenge on the world of work by ‘downshifting’ or ‘protiring’, by idling or becoming a player, or simply staying put and slacking on the job? Can the vacuum created by the absence of work ever be filled? An international panel of rebels against the work ethic considers the alternatives.

Speakers: Corinne Maier, author of Hello Laziness (Bonjour Paresse); Pat Kane, writer and author of The Play Ethic; Tom Hodgkinson, editor of The Idler and author of How to be Idle.

Sunday, May 15, 2005

Scholarship vs. Rock

War_on_workSome interesting pieces appearing recently around the Play Ethic - one a review by Catholic educational thinker Bob Davis in the Journal of Philosophy of Education (download word doc here) and my own proposal for a 'Play Foundation' (download word doc here) in the current issue of the Idler, 'War on Work' (in which I recommend a wonderful interview with Raoul Vanegiem, bon vivant soixante-huitard).

Sher_piece_on_hcAnd for those of you with an appetite for agonised post-punk-pop-star narcissism, here's a piece I wrote in the Sunday Herald today about the coming week... Epistemology meets bad dancing (but hopefully, a solid tenor voice will mediate).

Tuesday, April 19, 2005

The UK's first 'Thinker in Residence' is...

Festival_of_ideasI've just been appointed Britain's first 'thinker in residence' at Bristol's new Festival of Ideas, 16-20th May. It's an exciting prospect. I'll be staying in Bristol for five days, attending all the public events. I'm licensed to be a 'constructive heckler' - identifying broad themes that emerge from the discussions, making connections between realms of knowledge. (For any of you who've read The Play Ethic, you'll realise what an ideal gig this is for me...) I'll also be blogging the event everyday, posting right here, and writing up a report/article after.

In between events, I'll be doing learning journeys into the city of Bristol itself - talking about the power of play, bringing reports from the festival to everyone from teachers to technologists to entrepreneurs, being a 'contrarian catalyst'.  Bristol's creative and innovative credentials are second to none - from Brunel to Allen Lane (founder of Penguin) to Massive Attack. I'm happy with my press release quote:

Ideas are the lifeblood of cities – the faster and richer they flow, the healthier and more robust urban life becomes. I'm delighted and honoured to be appointed the first thinker-in-residence at Bristol Festival of Ideas. The luxury of following one's intellectual and creative instincts, in the company of such an exciting roster of thinkers and writers, is something I'm going to exploit to the full. Ideas should always be festive – as David Hume once said, true enlightenment is a "disagreement between friends". If we attain that ideal, we'll all have a wonderful week!

I'd urge you to download the PDF, but some of the names and topics are:

  • Paul Ormerod on economics
  • Colin Tudge, John Gray, Julia Neuberger, Joanna Bourke on the Moral State We're In
  • John Carey on What Good is the Arts?
  • Deyan Sudjic on the Edifice Complex
  • Paul Martin and Tom Hodgkinson on Happiness and Idleness
  • AC Grayling on Power of Ideas
  • Marek Kohn on Darwinism today
  • Steven Johnson on Why Popular Culture is Good For You

Fun, yes? For some reason, my appointment has caused some consternation among the punditocracy and editoriat. In Scotland (no surprise there), see the Daily Record, The Sunday Times, The Scotsman, Scotland on Sunday (reg. req. for the last two). And, surreally, in the Daily Telegraph - an op-ed piece, no less (more like burble-ed, but there we are). A little thread has started up at Demos, where I'm an associate - feel free to chip in. And Patrick Barber at the Guardian helpfully invited me to explain myself. In any case, hopefully, I'll see some of you at Bristol!

My Photo

PAT KANE'S PLAYJOURNAL

Who's Visiting From Where?

Playsigns

  • www.flickr.com
    This is a Flickr badge showing photos in a set called playsigns. Make your own badge here.

SEARCH 'PLAY JOURNAL'

The Play Ethic Network