Johnson entertainingly shows how appetites for spices led to international exploration and colonial empires and how the ornamentation of fashion and jewelry spurred technological innovation and industry. This is a history of what we do for fun.” It’s a history of how mankind has been making musical instruments from bones for as many millennia as it has been making weapons and how devices such as the player piano led to the development of computer software. “This is a history of play, a history of the pastimes that human beings have concocted to amuse themselves from the daily grind of subsistence. “This book is an extended argument for that kind of clue: a folly, dismissed by many as a mindless amusement, that turns out to be a kind of artifact from the future,” writes the author, who contends that delight and novelty have been given short shrift by cultural historians. An illumination of how civilization advances through the ways in which it plays.Īmusement, entertainment, and leisure are often seen as the byproducts of epochal change, yet Johnson ( How We Got to Now: Six Innovations that Made the Modern World, 2014, etc.) provides a compelling counterintuitive argument that the Industrial Revolution, democracy, and the computer age were all driven by diversions and appetites that historians too often ignore.
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