SPONSORED BY
We are pleased to invite you to the Chicago Seminar on Sport and Culture at the Newberry Library, co-sponsored by
Building the Modern Body: Sports and the Self-Made Ideal in Modern
Erik Jensen
Assistant Professor,
Dept. of History,
April 3, 2009
ABSTRACT
The Weimar Government produced a new and explicitly modern ideal of the human body, placing an imperative on the individual to engineer his/her body as an extension of a mature, industrial society. Athletes, more than anyone else, served as a model of precisely those qualities associated with modernity. The emphasis on measurement, record-keeping, and head-to-head rivalry in competitive sports pushed athletes to improve the outlet of lungs, heart, and biceps, just as the cutthroat economic climate demanded perpetual innovations in the business world. Sleek, taut, and rigorously engineered, the modern body established itself s the dominant ideal in
Dr. Jensen received his Ph.D in modern German History from the
For further information, contact Steve Riess s-riess@neiu.edu (773 442 5631) or Gerry Gems at grgems@noctrl.edu; (630 637-5502).