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Body Fascism : Salvation in the Technology of Physical Fitness

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In the last three decades of the 20th century, the physically fit body became the ideal of modern western societies.

Images of lean, sculpted men and women dominate the cultural landscape and are now ubiquitous on billboards, in magazines, film, television and video.

Science and popular culture are profoundly mixed in the contemporary scene, and have lead to a host of exercising and dieting technologies that will make actual bodies fit the taught, muscular ideal.

But, as Brian Pronger argues, this approach transforms more than the body's functions and contours; it diminishes its transcendent power, compelling it to conform to a profoundly limited imagination of what the body can do.Calling upon an impressive array of philosophers and other writers who have been critical of modern techno-scientific approaches to life, Pronger pries open the texts that form the technology of physical fitness in order to consider what they try to produce.

The work views technology not simply as a tool for other projects, but as a project itself, producing its own realities that Pronger argues are ultimately nihilistic.

Exploring fascinating intersections between postmodern Western and Western and Zen approaches to life, he develops a theory of the body and of science and technology that shows how the body's energy is vulnerable to insidious forms of exploitation as well as harbouring the potential for transcendence.

The volume should be of interest to scholars of the body, society, and science and technology, as well as to those who are personally drawn to modern technologies of physical fitness.

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Product Details
University of Toronto Press
080208480X / 9780802084804
Paperback / softback
306.4
09/11/2002
Canada
English
xvi, 276 p.
23 cm
postgraduate /research & professional /undergraduate Learn More