The Association for the Study of Play


The Association for the Study of Play is a multidisciplinary organization of scholars and practitioners in the field of play. The Association promotes the study of play, forges alliances with organizations advancing play, organizes yearly meetings to disseminate play research, and publishes a newsletter and monograph series.

History

The Association for the Study of Play emerged from a meeting of scholars of play held in Minneapolis, Minnesota, on April 14, 1973. The meeting was organized and chaired by Alyce Taylor Cheska, who was Head of the Department of Women's Physical Education at the University of Illinois at Urbana–Champaign and an affiliate professor in the Department of Anthropology. The scholars who met there formed the Cultural Anthropology of Play Reprint Society. The next year, Michael Salter organized the first formal meeting of the new organization at the University of Western Ontario during the North American Society for Sport History convention. Participants renamed the organization "The Association for the Anthropological Study of Play" and elected B. Allan Tindall as president. In 1987, the organization changed its name to The Association for the Study of Play. The proceedings of the Association's first conference were published in The Anthropological study of play : problems and prospects, a collection edited by edited by David F. Lancy and B. Allan Tindall.

Publications

The Association for the Study of Play publishes the quarterly TASP Newsletter, Play Review, and the annual edited Play & Culture Studies Series. The Play & Culture journal series replaced TASP's yearly publication of conference proceedings in 1988. TASP's official journal is the International Journal of Play, published by Taylor & Francis.

Meetings

TASP conducts holds a scholarly conference each year. These multidisciplinary meetings have been held in North America and Europe, and draw a range of scholars from the fields of anthropology, biology, communication studies, cultural studies, dance, ecology, education, ethology, folklore, history, kinesiology, leisure studies, musicology, philosophy, psychology, recreation, sociology, and the arts.