Editorial: Traditional Sporting Games and Play: Enhancing Cultural Diversity, Emotional Well-Being, Interpersonal Relationships and Intelligent Decisions

Citation: Lavega-Burgués P, Bortoleto MAC and Pic M (2021) Editorial: Traditional Sporting Games and Play: Enhancing Cultural Diversity, Emotional Well-Being, Interpersonal Relationships and Intelligent Decisions. Front. Psychol. 12:766625. doi: 10.3389/fpsyg.2021.766625 Editorial: Traditional Sporting Games and Play: Enhancing Cultural Diversity, Emotional Well-Being, Interpersonal Relationships and Intelligent Decisions

• The Universals of Games and Sports. Pierre Parlebas.  This e-book shows that the TSG operates as a mirror of the society where it is hosted, while at the same time it functions as an authentic laboratory of life experiences that have an impact on the deepest part of its players. Far from being minor manifestations, the texts confirm their worthiness and function in different past and present societies. Applied research is also presented in the context of formal education (primary, secondary, and university physical education), as well as in informal education (festive contexts) as well as in the field of sports initiation.
At the same time, this book also presents a wide variety of disciplines in researching TSGs: anthropology, ethnology, ethnography, sociology, history, pedagogy, social psychology, and a not very well-known discipline in the English-speaking scientific field: motor praxeology, the science of motor action.
At the same time, the scientific research on TSGs also shows a great variety of methodological strategies, from quasiexperimental designs to case studies or ethnographies. The research groups involved in this book have used quantitative approaches, qualitative studies, and as mixed-method designs. Statistical analyses (using different techniques of inferential statistics) and also content analyses of narrative texts (with different specific programs) reveal the distinctive features of TSGs and their contribution to a systemic view of health, i.e., physical, emotional, relational, and cognitive well-being.
Motor praxeology was created more than 50 years ago by Pierre Parlebas, a former student and professor of the University of Paris (Sorbonne-France). His unique academic journey includes higher education in physical education and sports, sociology, psychology, mathematics, and linguistics. Parlebas could be considered the Darwin, Freud, or Einstein of the field of physical education and sports, because he created a specific epistemological corpus for the field of motor practices in general and TSGs in particular. The theory of motor action bases its scientific foundations on a structural rather than structuralist approach that is original to the field of physical activity and sport.
Thanks to this publication in e-book format, researchers in the English-speaking world will be able to find out a new approach to researching TSGs, based on the systemic or structural approach. We hope that our colleagues in the Anglosphere will join us in the knowledge and application of the fundamentals of this scientific discipline, as has already been done in Africa (e.g., Algeria, Congo, Guinea, Mali, Morocco, and Tunisia), America (e.g., Argentina, Brazil, Colombia, Chile, and United States), Asia (e.g., South Korea), and Europe (e.g., France, Italy, Portugal, Spain, and Switzerland).
For this reason, it is not surprising that some authors of this book review the most important of Parlebas' books. Chaâbane takes on the challenge of reviewing of probably the main publication in the science of motor action: Contribution à un lexique commenté en science de l'action motrice. Through the definition of the core concepts for an in-depth understanding of motor situations, Parlebas proposes a specific scientific language to the domain of physical activities and sports (PAS) and an innovative analysis of physical and playful activities. The first edition (1981) is a testimony of the birth of a new point of view on motor actions. The second one (1999) highlights one of the consequences of this new approach: the interest in traditional games. Parlebas presents the concept of the internal logic (Parlebas, 1981(Parlebas, , 1999, an intrinsic reality of sporting games which exposes the motor conducts. These conducts manifest according to the relationship they create between the actor and its environment: relationship with space, objects, time, and other actors. This discipline also offers a systemic and scientific classification of TSG that has provided multiple interpretations and applications. In addition, the motor action states that, on the basis of a rigorous analysis of ludomotor structures, extrinsic elements of the game bring further clarifications and enrich the understanding of TSG, from the angle of their relationship to culture and the social environment in which they are developed. Every motricity is an "ethnomotricity" (Parlebas, 1981(Parlebas, , 1999. The frivolousness of TSGs is only an appearance: they are in reality the mirror of the community to which they belong, and they participate in the cultural identity of each society which represents original playful patterns, linked to their lifestyles (Parlebas, 2001;Lagardera and Lavega, 2003).
Pascal Bordes writes the book review of Parlebas' second key work: Éléments de Sociologie du Sport. Parlebas uses a rigorous methodology linked to an innovative standpoint to develop his scientific contributions. Sport is coherently conceived and understood as "the finite and countable set of motor situations codified in the form of institutionalized competition" (p. 55). Any traditional sporting game is precisely distinguished from sports because it lacks recognition by the authorities in place, and from federations and international committees in particular. They represent the diversity of an exuberant ludomotor heritage. On the contrary, sports embody massive hierarchical, centralized, and normative regulatory systems.
Behind the apparent diversity of forms in the sports world there operates one same deep structure: opposition in the form of contests between teams or individuals that fight on equal terms according to scores of capitalizable numerical units; sport presents itself as the Esperanto of physical games.
Subsequently, Founaud and Oiarbide present the book review of La Aventura Praxiológica. Ciencia, Acción y Educación Física that contains 32 selected and translated by the editor Raúl Martínez-Santos, who groups them chronologically and thematically. It is the adventure that Parlebas undertakes to create the science of motor action, a new conception of physical education, the process of creation of a matrix science, a change of paradigm for an orphan, as physical education has been.
By reading these three core books of motor praxeology, researchers will recognize the fundamentals and use of the main meaningful concepts related to the system and the actor, i.e., the game and its protagonists. Concerning the game, two key concepts emerge: (a) the internal logic or identity card, that asks players to solve four types of internal relationships: with others, with the physical space, with time, and with the materials; (b) an innovative classification of sporting games with eight different action domains regarding the relationships that agents establish with their social and natural milieus. These two concepts, which are widely used as independent variables in multiple research studies, lead us to the key concept of the actor: the "motor conduct" understood as the meaningful organization of motor behaviors, as the common factor of games, sports, and any physical activity, and, consequently, as the proper object of object physical education.
The reader of this e-book can feel privileged accessing the article The Universals of Games and Sports written especially for this monograph by Pierre Parlebas. This article shows that behind the superficial disorder that is all the rage in traditional games, there is an in-depth order in there as well. The "universals" are these laws of order, these underlying objective systems on top of which the praxic exchanges that can be observed in all games and sports are built: operational models which represent the basic structures of the functioning of any sporting game, bearers of the fundamental features of its internal logic. Ludodiversity is a confirmed phenomenon: the analysis of universals reveals that the alleged superior complexity of sports is an illusion. Between traditional games and sports there is not a difference in degree, but in nature.
This e-book also reviews other works that have used motor praxeology to research TSGs: Prabucki, Poland reviews Games and Society in Europe (published by the European Traditional Sports and Games Association (ETSGA/AEJeST) stating the status of TSGs as an intangible cultural heritage.
Pubill analyses the Catalan Encyclopedia The Traditional Games and Sports. Traditionari. The 25 authors provide an excellent approach from the past (tradition) and the present (modernity) in order to understand the current society through the foster important values on TSGs.
Rodrigues describes how motor praxeology also contributes to understanding the motor and socio-cultural richness of Portuguese TSGs, in the work Recreios Collegiaes, authored by Priest Pedro Aloy. One of the findings of the analysis of this work is the great predominance of socio-motor games that encourage a great diversity of interpersonal relationships.
The fundamentals of motor praxeology also allow to identify the ethnomotor singularity of TSGs in the Canary Islands (Luchoro-Parrilla et al.). The playful activities were games (activities with rules) and played with objects, that enhanced material and social sustainability experiences. Motor action theory was also applied to interpret the distinctive features of TSGs during the Spanish Civil War (Ormo-Ribes et al.). Different features were observed when comparing TSGs with and without war connotations.
Fitri et al. present an ethnography of TSGs in the commemoration of Indonesia Independence Day that is conducted annually. Games and local culture are an inseparable binomial.
Rodríguez-Fernández et al. analyze, using mixed methods, the Skittles on the Northern Route of the Camino de Santiago, revealing symbols of local traditional heritage. Saura and Zimmermann wrote an article to discuss how a TSG Festival in a public school in São Paulo, Brazil, promotes intercultural dialog with a focus on sustainability, and how it empowers people and creates equality among its players.
Araújo and Jaqueira apply a multi-method process to analyze the Blows and Capoeira Movements from the Caricatures of Calixto Cordeiro in Brazil. The research shows substantial information about the blows/moves of this contest, as well as its different names, slang, and expressive forms, often associated with different groups of practitioners from different Brazilian cities.
The contextual view of TSGs is complemented by the contribution of Waluch, by reviewing the book The Story of Catch: The Story of Lancashire Catch-as-Catch-Can Wrestling by Ruslan C. Pashayev. The historic approach describes this wrestling TSG in different periods. This is the only major book ever to cover this subject.
This e-book explains that emotions can be studied from different disciplines, in addition to psychology. Costes et al. This study brings the value of considering games as a key role to promote the education of social-emotional well-being in schoolchildren, as the basis of academic training García-Monge et al. explore the childhood meanings of the chained bear TSG and compare their findings with the cultural meanings of different traditional versions of this game. Their results show that, beyond the individual images that each child created in their mind, most of them coincided in stories about harassment, defense, theft, and protection.
The pedagogical use of TSGs is also the focus of interest in the contribution by Martínez-Santos et al. when they carry out a conceptual analysis to try to and reconcile two perspectives, namely motor praxeology and teaching games for understanding (TGfU). Their conclusion is that TGfU, or gamebased approaches to sports coaching and teaching, can take great advantage of the motor-praxeological rationale.
Martínez-Santos reviews the book La paradoja de jugar en tríada (The motor game in triad) by Pic and Navarro-Adelantado, showing the sporting games in which three teams play against each other performing interesting paradoxical situations. Any game in which three agents interact leads to triadic motor interaction systems, that is, to motor action systems in which one player's acts must be interpreted as positive or negative in relation to any other two players' relationship.
Finally, Oboeuf et al. illustrate the influence of traditional sporting games on the development of creative skills in football. Creativity originates from an interaction between divergence and convergence. In this research, the number of communications (fluidity) and the diversity of updated communications (flexibility) are the divergence indicators. Convergence is studied as the ability to make good decisions. The results show that TSGs can help develop players' creative abilities.
The editors would also like to acknowledge the valuable work of around fifty reviewers that joined this process. With this great team, we believe this book represents a substantial contribution to the TSG field.
Finally, we would also like to thank the journal Frontiers in Psychology for being a pioneer in organizing a scientific monograph on traditional sporting games and play.

AUTHOR CONTRIBUTIONS
All authors listed (PL-B, MB, and MP) have made a substantial, direct, and intellectual contribution to the work, and approved it for publication.

ACKNOWLEDGMENTS
The editors of this book would like to acknowledge the valuable work of around fifty reviewers that joined this process. With this great team, this book represents a substantial contribution to the TSG field. Finally, we would also like to thank the Journal Frontiers in Psychology for being a pioneer in organizing a scientific monograph on traditional sporting games and play.