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¥ 26.34 6.3折 ¥ 42 全新
库存3件
作者裴东光主编
出版社北京体育大学出版社
ISBN9787564427351
出版时间2018-02
装帧其他
开本其他
定价42元
货号9177009
上书时间2024-12-23
Branding the Maple Leaf:The Olympic Games and the Rise of CanadianM National and International Identity
RobertK.Barney
A Five.Ringed Coup D'etat:The 1 984 Olympic Victory over President Ronald Reagan's Cold War Foreign Policy
Brad J.Congelio.Ph.D
A Grassroots Initiative in Olympic Education in China:A First Person Account Dongguang Pei
The Body,Sexualization and the New Voyeur at the Early Olympic Games 1896.1928
Kevin B.Wamsley
Catch Me If You Can:An Examination ofAmbush Marketing Xiaowei Yu
From Partners in Pursuit ofExcellence to“Own the Podium:”An Ideological Slip in Canadian Olympic Spon DouglasA.Brown
“Give My Gold Medal Back”Jim Thorpe
the Most Tragic Olympic Hero Wenshuai(Sunny)Mao
Refugees from Behind the Iron Curtain:Stateless Athletes,Cold War Politics,and the International Olympic Committee Toby C.Rider
《奥林匹克研究英文论文集(英文版)》:
Sexuality and the Body at the Turn of the 20th Century
The shifting polarities of public (un)acceptance and private indulgence with regards to sexual matters in the \fictorian era resulted in an increasing centrality of the body in society at the turn ofthe twentieth century. With the preoccupation ofthe ruling classes over covering the form, and the public repression of physical desires throughout the conservative nineteenth century, the body constituted somewhat of an absent presence. Concomitantly, during this period, the trade in pornography (both in the form ofliterature and pictures) expanded as a widespread (albeit clandestine) and lucrative commercial enterprise.4 In the relatively liberated era that emerged at the end of the nineteenth century, these inherent tensions of the Victorian period began to resolve themselves, as the body became gradually more visible in several areas ofpublic, social life, particularly through sport.
Sport and exercise was an area in which medicine had a highly influential voice, particularly with regards to the participation of females.5 As the literature amply demonstrates, by the turn of the century medicine had assumed a central role in society with respect to the notion of health. Further, the increasingly hedonistic attitudes encouraged by consumerism, in part encouraged people to take interest in the improvement of their own bodies, both from a health and an aesthetic perspective. This is evident in the emergence of periodicals such as Health magazine and Physical Culture in the late 1800s. This phenomenon of physical culture saw a dovetailing of two of the key revolutions at the turn of the century: the rise in consumer culture (and thus the increased importance on appearance and material goods), and the emerging focus on the body. Within the Vaudeville circuit, Eugene Sandow contributed immensely to the phenomena of displaying well-muscled men's and women's bodies in public.6 Performing feats of improbable strength in his shows, Sandow captured the public imagination and hunger for the spectacle - an interest also evident in the World Expositions during the same era7 and the popularity of his shows demonstrated an increasingly liberated expression of sexual desire towards both male and female models. Indeed, Sandow posed nude for photographs as well as offering private exhibitions after his regular performances.
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