"A highly unique and refreshing contribution. Heywood not only
theorizes the relationships among feminism, activism, and
bodybuilding but also provides what so many works on built female
bodies lack-a feminine historical context. . . . Heywood concludes
with a call for women to 'feel our muscles, our power, our
terrible, wonderful, monstrous strengths' by leaving behind
aerobics, replacing light weights with heavy ones, and claiming our
right to take up space. . . . Like all influential and
groundbreaking works, this book raises new and important questions
that should provide grist for much feminist debate and scholarship
in coming years." --Signs "Bodymakers is most ambitious in terms of
its engagement with feminist cultural criticism and its
unconventional scope. Heywood comments on film, novels, magazine
pictures, popular criticisms of feminism, the J. Crew catalog,
[and] the concept of power feminism." --Gender and Society "In this
brilliantly insightful and immensely readable book, Leslie Heywood
makes us think about women's body building in an entirely new way.
She argues persuasively that, far from being an individualistic,
apolitical act, it is a powerful form of resistance, empowering
women to overcome their victim status and heal past abuse." --Myra
Dinnerstein, University of Arizona "Bodymakers has a power and an
honesty that is unusual in a book with its theoretical
sophistication." --Susan Bordo, author of Unbearable Weight and
Twilight Zones: The Hidden Life of Cultural Images from Plato to
O.J. "With clarity, force, and passionate investment grounded in
both theory and her own experience, Heywood understands that women
can strengthen body, mind, and spirit through everyday practice.
Her argument that body building is this kind of activist practice
is as inspirational as it is poignant." --Joanna Frueh, author of
Erotic Faculties "Flexing her muscles through autobiographical,
theoretical, and spectacular acts, Heywood insists that we read the
muscular female body not as an 'extreme oddity' but as a 'form of
activism' through which we can understand anew larger cultural
issues and trends, including the American romance with
individualism and the relationship of second and third wave
feminisms. Muscular female bodies will never be read in the same
way again." --Sidonie Smith, University of Michigan Women with
muscles are a recent phenomenon, so recent that, while generating a
good deal of interest, their importance to the cultural landscape
has yet to be acknowledged. Leslie Heywood looks at the sport and
image of female body building as a metaphor for how women fare in
our current political and cultural climate. She argues that the
movement in women's body building from small, delicate bodies to
large powerful ones and back again is directly connected to
progress and backlash within the abortion debate, the ongoing
struggle for race and gender equality, and the struggle to define
"feminism" in the context of the nineties. She discusses female
body building as activism, as an often effective response to abuse,
race and masculinity in body building, and the contradictory ways
that photographers treat female body builders. Engaging and
accessible, Bodymakers reveals how female body builders find
themselves both trapped and empowered by their sport.
General
Imprint: |
Rutgers University Press
|
Country of origin: |
United States |
Release date: |
February 1998 |
First published: |
1998 |
Authors: |
Leslie Heywood
|
Dimensions: |
229 x 152 x 15mm (L x W x T) |
Format: |
Paperback
|
Pages: |
240 |
Edition: |
New |
ISBN-13: |
978-0-8135-2480-1 |
Categories: |
Books
|
LSN: |
0-8135-2480-6 |
Barcode: |
9780813524801 |
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