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"Empire of Ecstasy" offers a novel interpretation of the explosion
of German body culture between the two wars - nudism and nude
dancing, gymnastics and dance training, dance photography and
criticism, and diverse genres of performance from solo dancing to
mass movement choirs. Karl Toepfer presents this dynamic subject as
a vital and historically unique construction of 'modern identity.'
The modern body, radiating freedom and power, appeared to Weimar
artists and intelligentsia to be the source of a transgressive
energy, as well as the sign and manifestation of powerful,
mysterious 'inner' conditions. Toepfer shows how this view of the
modern body sought to extend the aesthetic experience beyond the
boundaries imposed by rationalized life and to transcend these
limits in search of ecstasy. With the help of much unpublished or
long-forgotten archival material (including many little-known
photographs), he investigates the process of constructing an
'empire' of appropriative impulses toward ecstasy. Toepfer presents
the work of such well-known figures as Rudolf Laban, Mary Wigman,
and Oskar Schlemmer, along with less-known but equally fascinating
body culture practitioners. His book is certain to become required
reading for historians of dance, body culture, and modernism.
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