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Eugenics and Physical Culture Performance in the Progressive Era: Watch Whiteness Workout: Palgrave Studies in Theatre and Performance History

Autor Shannon L. Walsh
en Limba Engleză Paperback – 17 noi 2021
This book strives to unmask the racial inequity at the root of the emergence of modern physical culture systems in the US Progressive Era (1890s–1920s). This book focuses on physical culture – systematic, non-competitive exercise performed under the direction of an expert – because tracing how people practiced physical culture in the Progressive Era, especially middle- and upper-class white women, reveals how modes of popular performance, institutional regulation, and ideologies of individualism and motherhood combined to sublimate whiteness beneath the veneer of liberal progressivism and reform. The sites in this book give the fullest picture of the different strata of physical culture for white women during that time and demonstrate the unracialization of whiteness through physical culture practices. By illuminating the ways in which whiteness in the US became a default identity category absorbed into the “universal” ideals of culture, arts, and sciences, the author shows how physical culture circulated as a popular performance form with its own conventions, audience, and promised profitability. Finally, the chapters reveal troubling connections between the daily habits physical culturists promoted and the eugenics movement’s drive towards more reproductively efficient white bodies. By examining these written, visual, and embodied texts, the author insists on a closer scrutiny of the implicit whiteness of physical culture and forwards it as a crucial site of analysis for performance scholars interested in how corporeality is marshaled by and able to contest local and global systems of power.
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Specificații

ISBN-13: 9783030587666
ISBN-10: 3030587665
Pagini: 202
Ilustrații: XIV, 202 p. 9 illus., 1 illus. in color.
Dimensiuni: 148 x 210 mm
Greutate: 0.29 kg
Ediția:1st ed. 2020
Editura: Springer International Publishing
Colecția Palgrave Macmillan
Seria Palgrave Studies in Theatre and Performance History

Locul publicării:Cham, Switzerland

Cuprins

Chapter 1: Introduction: Exorcising a Forgotten Physical Culture.- Chapter 2: Progressive Era Physical Culture and the Aesthetics of Whiteness.- Chapter 3: Dudley Allen Sargent’s Classed and Classing Fitness: Nature, Science, and Mimetic Exercise.- Chapter 4: “These Walls Could Not Contain Me”: Social Motherhood at the YWCA.- Chapter 5: Racialized Surrogates in Bernarr Macfadden’s Physical Culture.- Chapter 6: Exercise for Assimilation: Physical Culture for Indigenous Girls and Women.- Conclusion: Community Fitness for Social Change? 


Notă biografică

Shannon L. Walsh is Associate Professor of Theatre History at Louisiana State University, USA. She has published in Theatre Annual and Theatre Journal. She also edited Sporting Performance: Politics in Play (2020).

Textul de pe ultima copertă

This book strives to unmask the racial inequity at the root of the emergence of modern physical culture systems in the US Progressive Era (1890s–1920s). This book focuses on physical culture – systematic, non-competitive exercise performed under the direction of an expert – because tracing how people practiced physical culture in the Progressive Era, especially middle- and upper-class white women, reveals how modes of popular performance, institutional regulation, and ideologies of individualism and motherhood combined to sublimate whiteness beneath the veneer of liberal progressivism and reform. The sites in this book give the fullest picture of the different strata of physical culture for white women during that time and demonstrate the unracialization of whiteness through physical culture practices. By illuminating the ways in which whiteness in the US became a default identity category absorbed into the “universal” ideals of culture, arts, and sciences, the author shows howphysical culture circulated as a popular performance form with its own conventions, audience, and promised profitability. Finally, the chapters reveal troubling connections between the daily habits physical culturists promoted and the eugenics movement’s drive towards more reproductively efficient white bodies. By examining these written, visual, and embodied texts, the author insists on a closer scrutiny of the implicit whiteness of physical culture and forwards it as a crucial site of analysis for performance scholars interested in how corporeality is marshaled by and able to contest local and global systems of power.Shannon Walsh is an Associate Professor of Theatre History at Louisiana State University, USA. She has published in Theatre Annual and Theatre Journal. She also edited Sporting Performance: Politics in Play (2020).

Shannon L. Walsh is Associate Professor of Theatre History at Louisiana State University, USA. She haspublished in Theatre Annual and Theatre Journal. She also edited Sporting Performance: Politics in Play (2020).


Caracteristici

Traces how various sites of Progressive Era (1890–1920) physical culture performance became sites of whiteness-in-the-making Demonstrates the de-racialization of whiteness through physical culture practices Shows how physical culture circulated as a popular performance form with its own conventions, audience, and promised profitability