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Lecture 8 Nudity and Nature

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Title: Lecture 8 Nudity and Nature


1
Lecture 8Nudity and Nature
  • World Population Oct, 2009 6.7888 billion US
    Census Bureau
  • Announcements
  • ... ?
  • CAUTION sensitive material in artifact
    with attendance sheet
  • Thursday presentations begin also, email me
    if you need assistance in finding articles for
    paper.
  • In October, we begin to focus on material
    aspects of gender, sex, sexuality, and nature
    consider bodies, among other things, materials
    on/in/through which gender, sexuality, and
    environmental ideals and practices intersect.
  • Start reading A and S on Goffman on my Personal
    Webpage LINK, accessible through the homepage of
    the Department of Sociology and Criminology
  • Closer to the final exam, The Smell of Burning
    Ants video will be show from 145 215 during
    class time following the regularly scheduled
    lecture.
  • Office Hours Tuesdays 230-330 McNally 412
    OR by appointment daily email communication
  • TodaySociology and Human Bodies
  • SMUO Bell, D. and Holliday, R. (2000). Naked as
    nature intended. Body and Society, 6 (3/4),
    127-140.

2
Why should sociology give voice to material
aspects of how we negotiate our bodies through
society? photos LIBERACE
www.reagleplayers.com GHANDI www.larrymulvehill.c
om
  • To examine our interpretations of which materials
    we need and use, environmental sociologist
    Michael Bell draws from the work of
  • Karl Marx
  • Abraham Maslow

3
Karl Marx (1818-1883)
  • Our work all of it depends on interacting
    with and using nature in some way. Thats a fact
    of life.
  • We have bodies We have needs.
  • To meet those needs, we turn to the external
    world for materials to clothe, house, and feed
    ourselves.
  • That external world is a sensual world that
    is, a world we can see, touch, hear, smell, and
    taste. things we sense
  • How we gather the materials from that sensual
    world varies from culture to culture based on
    ideologies of need.
  • (photo from www.philothek.de)
  • Those cultural ideologies, based on need, dictate
    how we arrange ourselves and our economy around
    the natural environment.
  • This means that we/society and the natural world
    are inextricably connected, having an enormous
    impact on our economic system because, after
    all, we need to buy stuff to meet our needs.
  • This intimate arrangement means that we both
    suffer and enjoy the consequences of how we set
    up our ecological community.
  • Historical Materialism Marxs methodology to
    examine how actions throughout history impact our
    past present actions an after-the-fact process
    which did not separate humans/societies from
    their past in order to understand where our ideas
    came/come from.
  • History legacy of social activities.
  • This led Marx to believe that our materialistic
    needs were 100 socially constructed AND that we
    arrange ourselves/society in ways we can be
    almost certain to have those needs met.

4
Main critique of Marxist thought is it causal?
5
Abraham Maslow (1908-1970)
  • (photo from photobucket.com)
  • Born in Brooklyn, NY, psychologist worked with
    monkeys, noted several striking similarities
    between them and human society for one some
    needs take precedence over others
  • For example, sex is a weaker need
  • than thirst and eating
  • Heirarchy of Needs Pyramid
  • (photo miracopa.edu)

6
Maslow(though largely misinterpreted, and he
later re-articulated his theory)
  • basic needs are at the base we need to
    somehow fulfill those before successfully going
    on to fulfill others
  • We seek to fulfill those needs unconsciously
  • Much criticism of this theory
  • Most important criticism It does NOT address why
    we take more than we need!
  • Three other important failings in the theory
  • 1. Our needs and the ways we seek to meet them
    do not happen in a hierarchy
  • 2. The theory is too materialistic-based without
    much devotion to ideals, such as pleasure.
  • 3. The theory is thoroughly Western-ized (in its
    origin and its target audience) too much
    emphasis on civilization we seek fulfillment
    in many directions we, therefore, cannot
    generalize this to other cultures even within
    Canada.

7
In sum, many sociologists accept that -
  • Bodies are, among other things, materials
    through/on which ideals and practices are
    culturally influenced.
  • Our material body requires environmental
    materials in order to survive entire societies
    are built from this need.
  • Materials from our environments are embedded in
    our everyday/everynight lives in ways of which we
    are both conscious and unconscious.
  • From an environmental sociological perspective,
    it is important to consider our bodies as
    materials in sociology in order to unpack new
    ecological dialogue on gender, sex, sexuality,
    and nature.
  • Remember ideals, materials, and practices are
    not mutually exclusive
  • Because ideas are powerful things, we will now
    turn our attention to how various ideals around
    gender, sex, and nature are physically
    represented in the social and natural worlds...
  • Consider materials anything we sense or do with
    our bodies SEE, HEAR, TOUCH/FEEL, TASTE, or
    SMELL

8
Bodies Environment Gender - an example of
this intersection
  • The Eland Bull Dance Tribal females act like
    eland cows who are romancing each other and
    mating, dancing backward toward the huts where
    the (newly) menstruating girl lays under a cloak.
    She becomes a woman because of the dancing
    outside. (www.dhushara.com/paradoxhtm/culture/ela
    nd1.jpg)
  • Compare this to mainstream western culture -
    is there a comparable event/rite of passage here
    to respond to a females bodily changes?

9
a material artifact found in South
AfricaRock art on the ritual from about 3000
years ago in Fultons Cave, Lesotho


  • (homepages.uel.ac.uk)
  • What might be around in 3000 years to teach
    those future societies about menstruation as it
    is today for many females?

10
Not only do we have dominant ideals about
natural bodies, we constantly embed and
interpret nude bodies in society
  • The Arts
  • Myth
  • Beauty
  • Strength
  • Eroticism
  • Sexuality
  • Taboo underground
  • Religion
  • Academic texts and popular press covers
  • Health and medicine
  • Federation of Canadian Nudists based in Ontario
    (FCN LINK CAUTION back nudity)
  • Famous Photo of ???? (photographer Annie
    Leibovitz)

11
Wherever there is culture, counterculture is
possible. Who might challenge this trailers
presence in their community? What are some
possible ideals of the counterculture?
12
terminology
  • What is a naturalist?
  • (photo www.msn.com)
  • What is a naturist?
  • (photo www.bbc.co.uk/wiltshire )
  • What is a nudist?
  • (clothing is not optional during at least some
    part of the naturist performance)
  • (photo images-cdn01.associatedcontent.com)
  • Much overlap exists, and we take them for
    granted, but they differ.

13
- What makes a definition official?
  • Naturism / Nudism are defined by the INF
    (International Naturist Federation)
  • Naturism is a lifestyle in harmony with nature,
    expressed through social nudity, and
    characterized by self-respect of people with
    different opinions and of the environment.
  • Social nudity constitutes an essential
    characteristic of naturism, fully exploiting the
    beneficial effects of the sun, the air and water.
  • Naturism restores the balance between physical
    and psychic dimensions, with leisure spent in a
    natural environment, through exercising the body,
    within the fundamental principles of hygiene and
    dietetics.
  • Furthermore, Naturism fosters many activities by
    nurturing creativity.
  • Complete nakedness is the "best-possible suit"
    to realise the return of humans to nature, and it
    surely is the most visible mark of naturism, even
    though it is not the only one.
  • Nudity has a balancing effect on humans by
    reducing the tensions caused by the taboos and
    provocations of modern society, showing the way
    to a more simple, healthy, and humane way of
    living. (http//www.inf-fni
    .org/index_e.htm)

14
ReadingBell, D. and Holliday, R. (2000). Naked
as nature intended. Body and Society, 6 (3/4),
127-140.
  • Geography cultural norms affect how well we can
    negotiate our nudity in society and nature. For
    example, despite morality resistance, the nudist
    movement aligned with the liberating effects of
    the hippie movement in 1960s North America.
  • In the early 1900s United Kingdom, as in North
    America, mass urbanization unfolded. This gave
    rise to a nostalgia toward the natural landscape
    many had left behind a leisure ideal.
  • Many of those who had stayed behind considered
    themselves naturists involved in the
    back-to-the-land movement (vegetarianism, folk
    songs, handicrafts, communal living). But, their
    paradise collapsed as they suffered from the
    leisure ideal in that the city folk wanted to
    return to the countryside now and then.

15
  • IN GERMANY
  • Hitler outlawed social nudity---it became a
    material/physical/concrete representation of
    deviance
  • This affected more than 3,000,000 German people
  • Prior to that, it had been practiced and/or
    tolerated by the German populous for the most
    part
  • This new law marked the first significant
    division in where it was acceptable to be nude
    and where it was not out in nature, it was a
    natural thing, but in the city or suburbs, it was
    viewed as lewd and sexual.
  • IN ENGLAND
  • Around the same time Hitler outlawed social
    nudity, Englands eccentric writers and artists,
    who took part in nudity performances as a social
    fact, found themselves scorned by the morality
    squads of the day they were treated as vulgar,
    and were driven even further underground, such as
    the BlackThorns Sun Club which is going
    strong today.

16
Ties between naturism/nudity and sexuality
  • In England at the beginning to mid-1900s, the
    countryside was becoming re-Romanticized this
    included not only the landscape and beaches, but
    also the ideal of the humans who lived there ---
    rugged, naked, natural, animalistic which lent
    to an erotic ideal of the countryside.
  • Sex in the outdoors had been correlated with
    social outcasts, particularly gay men, which was
    interpreted as eroticism within that leisure
    ideal of the countryside. Todays artifact a
    material representation of todays ideals.
  • However Men now had an arena to be men, as part
    of a gay ideal and in direct response to the
    feminization of society and a growing sense of
    feminism in the air.
  • In North America, men headed to the wilderness
    and wrote about it, such as Henry David Thoreaus
    Walden. They believed they were
    discovering/re-discovering their deep
    masculinity whereby becoming a man meant
    connecting intensely with nature through
    interaction rituals with the natural world around
    them. (Women stayed home with the kids!)

17
All of this heated up the minds of the English
status quo Causing a moral panic of sorts
Spurring off intensified surveillance of queer
society
  • Note the intersection of sexuality, bodies, and
    environment in that phenomenon
  • We are constantly on guard against nudity and
    open displays of homosexuality, considering them
    deviant aspects of western ways of public life.
  • Are you under surveillance? How are we on
    constant guard against public nudity in SMU
    culture?
  • LINK SMU link to International Students Handbook
    on What to Wear
  • In the early 1960s at SMU, there was a dress
    code. The students were expected to wear shirts
    and ties to class at all times
    (http//www.smu.ca/administration/archives/decade_
    1960.html).
  • What are some other examples of moral panics
    around nudity?
  • Is a naked body closer to nature?

18
Next Class Readings
  • SMUO Holmes, J.S. (2006). Bare bodies, beaches,
    and boundaries Abjected outsiders and
    rearticulation at the nude beach. Sexuality and
    Culture, 10 (4), 29-53.
  • NET David H. Net Nude Crystal Crescent Beach,
    Halifax, Nova Scotia. www.netnude.com/main/info/ca
    nada/cyrst981.html
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