TY - BOOK AU - Sharples,John TI - A Cultural History of Chess-Players: Minds, Machines, and Monsters SN - 9781526120540 AV - GV1457.5 .S537 2017 U1 - 794.10922 PY - 2017/// CY - Manchester PB - Manchester University Press KW - Chess players-Rating of KW - Chess players-Biography KW - Electronic books N1 - Cover -- A cultural history of chess-players -- Contents -- Acknowledgements -- Introduction: 'Of magic look and meaning': themes concerning the cultural chess-player -- Part I: Minds -- 1 Sinner, melancholic, and animal: three lives of the chess-player in medieval and early-modern literature -- 2 'A quiet game of chess?' Respectability in urban and literary space -- 3 Elementary: the chess-player and the literary detective -- Part II: Machines -- 4 Future shocks: IBM's Deep Blue and the Automaton Chess-Player, 1997-1769 -- 5 A haunted mind: Kasparov and the machines -- 6 'Everything was black': locating monstrosity in representations of the Automaton Chess-Player -- Part III: Monsters -- 7 Red, black, white, and blue: American monsters -- 8 Performance notes: absence and presence in Reykjavik, Iceland, 1972 -- 9 Kapow! The chess-player in comic-books, 1940-53 -- Epilogue: exploding heads and the death of the chess-player -- Select bibliography -- Index N2 - This inquiry concerns the cultural history of the chess-player. It takes as its premise the idea that the chess-player has become a fragmented collection of images, underpinned by challenges to, and confirmations of, chess's status as an intellectually-superior and socially-useful game, particularly since the medieval period UR - https://ebookcentral.proquest.com/lib/orpp/detail.action?docID=5188151 ER -