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Children's Games in Street and Playground
Iona Opie
€ 13.99
€ 11.76
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Description for Children's Games in Street and Playground
Paperback. .
Perhaps this book should come with a warning to parents: within these pages, children deliberately scare each other, ritually hurt each other, take foolish risks, promote fights, and play ten against one. And yet throughout, they consistently observe their own sense of fair play.
'During the past fifty years, shelf-loads of books have been written instructing children in the games they ought to play -- and some even instructing adults on how to instruct children in the games they ought to play -- but few attempts have been made to record the games children in fact play.'
This ... Read more
Product Details
Publisher
Floris Books United Kingdom
Number of pages
224
Format
Paperback
Publication date
2009
Condition
New
Weight
356g
Number of Pages
224
Place of Publication
Edinburgh, United Kingdom
ISBN
9780863156670
SKU
V9780863156670
Shipping Time
Usually ships in 4 to 8 working days
Ref
99-2
About Iona Opie
Iona Archibald Opie was born in 1923. During the Second World War, she met and married Peter Opie. Together they became a renowned husband-and-wife team of folklorists with a particular interest in children's toys, games and literature, working from their home in Hampshire and conducting primary fieldwork all over the United Kingdom. Their remarkable collection of children's books and ephemera ... Read more
Reviews for Children's Games in Street and Playground
'The Opies have compiled the most complete and the most sympathetic, also the most sensible account of what children prefer to do on their own.'
Country Life 'It is a work of serious anthropology and sociology ... but unlike most works concerned with these disciplines, it is consistently readable, always humane, and sometimes very funny.'
New Statesman ... Read more
Country Life 'It is a work of serious anthropology and sociology ... but unlike most works concerned with these disciplines, it is consistently readable, always humane, and sometimes very funny.'
New Statesman ... Read more