
Power Play
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In Power Play, Jenny Adams looks to medieval literary representations to ask what they can tell us both about the ways the game changed as it was naturalized in the West and about the society these changes reflected. In its Western form, chess featured a queen rather than a counselor, a judge or bishop rather than an elephant, a knight rather than a horse; in some manifestations, even the pawns were differentiated into artisans, farmers, and tradespeople with discrete identities.
Power Play is the first book to ask why chess became so popular so quickly, why its pieces were altered, and what the consequences of these changes were. More than pleasure was at stake, Adams contends. As allegorists and political theorists connected the moves of the pieces to their real-life counterparts, chess took on important symbolic power. For these writers and others, the game provided a means to figure both human interactions and institutions, to envision a civic order not necessarily dominated by a king, and to imagine a society whose members acted in concert, bound together by contractual and economic ties. The pieces on the chessboard were more than subjects; they were individuals, playing by the rules.
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Content
- Cover
- Title Page
- Copyright Page
- Dedication Page
- Table of Contents
- Introduction: Chess in the Medieval World
- 1: (Re)moving the King: Ideals of Civic Order in Jacobus de Cessolis's Liber de ludo scachorum
- 2: Taxonomies of Desire in Les Echecs Amoureux
- 3: Exchequers and Balances: Anxieties of Exchange in Chaucerian Fictions
- 4: "The Kynge must be thus Maad": Playing with Power in Fifteenth-Century England
- Epilogue
- Notes
- Bibliography
- Index
- Acknowledgments
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