Make/Unmake: Play at the Centre of Culture Change

Anna Beresin
Open Book Publishers
2026-03-05

Anna Beresin’s 'Make/Unmake' is an engaging and deeply original exploration of children’s play as a powerful cultural force. Drawing on ethnographic research and vivid travel writing, the author journeys to the Midlands region of England to observe three remarkable play-based programs: the Maker{Futures} Mobile Makerspace, the Pitsmoor Adventure Playground, and the GLUE Collective. She captures the voices of playworkers, teachers, and artists and documents the ingenuity of children turning objects into tools of imagination and change.

At a moment when children’s opportunities for material play are shrinking, this book confronts urgent questions: Who gets to play? Who is left out? The work resonates with UNICEF’s recent call to address inequality, climate pressures, and technological shifts shaping children’s lives today. By centring under-resourced communities, gender equity, and cultural representation, this volume reframes play as both a process of making and unmaking the world—an act of resilience, creativity, and collective transformation.

This book will appeal to scholars and students in childhood studies, play studies, education, and cultural anthropology, as well as practitioners, teachers, policymakers, and all who are committed to protecting children’s right to play.

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Keywords

  • Age groups: children
  • Social and cultural anthropology
  • Educational psychology
  • Central / national / federal government policies
  • Philosophy and theory of education
  • childhood studies
  • culture change
  • makerspaces
  • play
  • playgrounds
  • UNICEF
  • Anthropology
  • Education
  • Politics and Sociology
  • Child, developmental and lifespan psychology
  • Social and cultural anthropology
  • Relating to childhood

Make/Unmake: Play at the Centre of Culture Change

Anna Beresin

Open Book Publishers

2026-03-05

CC BY-NC

Anna Beresin’s 'Make/Unmake' is an engaging and deeply original exploration of children’s play as a powerful cultural force. Drawing on ethnographic research and vivid travel writing, the author journeys to the Midlands region of England to observe three remarkable play-based programs: the Maker{Futures} Mobile Makerspace, the Pitsmoor Adventure Playground, and the GLUE Collective. She captures the voices of playworkers, teachers, and artists and documents the ingenuity of children turning objects into tools of imagination and change.

At a moment when children’s opportunities for material play are shrinking, this book confronts urgent questions: Who gets to play? Who is left out? The work resonates with UNICEF’s recent call to address inequality, climate pressures, and technological shifts shaping children’s lives today. By centring under-resourced communities, gender equity, and cultural representation, this volume reframes play as both a process of making and unmaking the world—an act of resilience, creativity, and collective transformation.

This book will appeal to scholars and students in childhood studies, play studies, education, and cultural anthropology, as well as practitioners, teachers, policymakers, and all who are committed to protecting children’s right to play.

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Included in Packages

Topics

  • Age groups: children
  • Social and cultural anthropology
  • Educational psychology
  • Central / national / federal government policies
  • Philosophy and theory of education
  • childhood studies
  • culture change
  • makerspaces
  • play
  • playgrounds
  • UNICEF
  • Anthropology
  • Education
  • Politics and Sociology
  • Child, developmental and lifespan psychology
  • Social and cultural anthropology
  • Relating to childhood