Spintop Play as Embodied and Process-Oriented Practice: Rethinking Simple Toys in Play Theory
R. P. Vansdadiya
Centre of Toy Science, Children’s University, Sector-20, Gandhinagar 382021, India.
N. H. Vasoya *
Centre of Toy Science, Children’s University, Sector-20, Gandhinagar 382021, India.
*Author to whom correspondence should be addressed.
Abstract
Spinning top (spintop) toys are among the oldest and most persistent forms of children’s play across cultures, yet they remain largely under-theorized within contemporary play studies. Existing literature frequently evaluates toys in terms of developmental outcomes, thereby overlooking the intrinsic play processes generated through interaction with simple, non-digital materials. This paper offers a conceptual and theoretical analysis of spintop play, positioning it as a distinct form of play characterized by embodied action, exploratory engagement, mastery-oriented repetition, imaginative extension and socially mediated interaction. Drawing on classical and contemporary play theory, affordance theory and embodied cognition, the analysis examines how the material properties of spintop toys—such as rotation, balance, minimal structure and sensitivity to bodily input—invite open-ended, process-based play. Rather than isolating cognitive, motor or social outcomes, the paper foregrounds the recursive dynamics through which meaning, pleasure, agency and skill emerge during play itself. Spintop toys are further situated as cultural and transgenerational play artifacts, demonstrating how materially simple objects sustain rich play ecologies across historical and contemporary contexts, including increasingly digitalized play environments. By reframing spintop play as a theoretically significant play form rather than a developmental instrument, this study contributes to play scholarship by re-centering attention on materiality, embodiment and process in understanding how play is generated, sustained and experienced.
Keywords: Play theory, embodied play, affordances, mastery play, traditional toys