I love this book. It is just so interesting, fascinating, detailed, and conflicting. I always thought chess was this elitist game for people who wanted to prove their intelligence. I just never understood how moving little pieces on a black and white board, proved that you were both intelligent and important. It is just a…
Birth of the Chess Queen was a good book
by Keenan T •
Chess Queen
by Edbo •
Birth of the Chess Queen, Plate 3
by cjakob •
Queens teaching their children to play chess. Alfonso’s Book of Chess, Spain, 1283. The image depicts two queens instructing their youthful daughters to play chess, with a rather large red and yellow chess board separating the mother-daughter teams. While the artistry is not particularly fascinating it depicts a rather surprising cultural phenomenon that sprang up around chess,…
The Language of Chess
by cjakob •
One of Marilyn Yalom’s greatest arguments in the Birth of the Chess Queen, is the pan-European language that Chess came to embody. She speaks of a lonely princess, forced to marry a prince of another land, passing her loneliest hours with a chess board. The language of chess allowed her to communicate through the game;…
Evolving Games
by Alan Kloosterhof •
Birth of the Chess Queen is similar to last week’s readings in that it traces how the development of a society’s game can mirror other elements of that society. One anecdote I found particularly thought provoking was how the increased mobility of the queen and bishop had the unintended effect of limiting women’s access to…
Reading Response IV
by chandsaker •
The book Birth of the Chess Queen revolves itself around one central theme, how did the Chess Queen become the powerhouse she is today? I find it interesting how the transition from the Visor and simple pieces in Islamic culture transformed throughout Europe over time, slowly making their way to Northwest Europe. The two central…
Make Chess not War
by Patrick Anderson •
Form over Function.
by Griffin H. •
It’s extremely jarring to see a chessboard that uses abstract symbology for its pieces rather than gendered/role based imagery. It’s a foreign thing, and as someone introduced to chess through its usual Western depiction I’d find it extremely difficult to play not having the rather opaque imagery typically depicted. Birth of the Chess Queen…