Freak Chic: Ekstrem muskelakkumulation som æstetisk ideal inden for professional bodybuilding
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Freak Chic : Ekstrem muskelakkumulation som æstetisk ideal inden for professional bodybuilding. / Bork Petersen, Franziska.
I: Periskop, Bind 22, 2019, s. 78-93.Publikation: Bidrag til tidsskrift › Tidsskriftartikel › Forskning › fagfællebedømt
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TY - JOUR
T1 - Freak Chic
T2 - Ekstrem muskelakkumulation som æstetisk ideal inden for professional bodybuilding
AU - Bork Petersen, Franziska
PY - 2019
Y1 - 2019
N2 - The article explores professional male bodybuilding as historically characterised by bodies’ continuous growth. Until a few decades ago, bodybuilders were associated with a more widely accepted ideal of muscular masculinity, a conception of male beauty that recalls J. J. Winckelmann’s aesthetic ideal of proportion and harmony. Such association has become unimaginable in recent decades. Since at least the 1990s, professional bodybuilders have strived for a “Post-Classic ideal”, built their bodies to resemble a “shredded mass” of muscle, and sometimes self-identified as “freaks” or “monsters”. In the article, I contextualise this rejection of mainstream beauty in contemporary bodybuilding with the increasing normalisation of fitness culture since the 1970s. As “going to the gym” became a mainstream activity, bodybuilding differentiated itself by developing significantly larger bodies and became an increasingly subcultural activity. I suggest two parameters as central in this development: a synthetic ideal and an aesthetics of accumulation. The dynamic aesthetics of competitive muscle accumulation recalls a capitalist logic of ‘more is more’ and apparently over-emphasises gender normativity. Yet, I aim to show in the article that in their hyperbolic performances for purely aesthetic purposes, contemporary male bodybuilders simultaneously undermine these very ideals.
AB - The article explores professional male bodybuilding as historically characterised by bodies’ continuous growth. Until a few decades ago, bodybuilders were associated with a more widely accepted ideal of muscular masculinity, a conception of male beauty that recalls J. J. Winckelmann’s aesthetic ideal of proportion and harmony. Such association has become unimaginable in recent decades. Since at least the 1990s, professional bodybuilders have strived for a “Post-Classic ideal”, built their bodies to resemble a “shredded mass” of muscle, and sometimes self-identified as “freaks” or “monsters”. In the article, I contextualise this rejection of mainstream beauty in contemporary bodybuilding with the increasing normalisation of fitness culture since the 1970s. As “going to the gym” became a mainstream activity, bodybuilding differentiated itself by developing significantly larger bodies and became an increasingly subcultural activity. I suggest two parameters as central in this development: a synthetic ideal and an aesthetics of accumulation. The dynamic aesthetics of competitive muscle accumulation recalls a capitalist logic of ‘more is more’ and apparently over-emphasises gender normativity. Yet, I aim to show in the article that in their hyperbolic performances for purely aesthetic purposes, contemporary male bodybuilders simultaneously undermine these very ideals.
U2 - 10.7146/periskop.v2019i22.121153
DO - 10.7146/periskop.v2019i22.121153
M3 - Tidsskriftartikel
VL - 22
SP - 78
EP - 93
JO - Periskop
JF - Periskop
SN - 0908-6919
ER -
ID: 371867400