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Naturist Law,
Public Nudity, Naturist Films (click here)
WHAT IS NATURISM (see below)
There are many sources on the internet that gives you information
about naturism and nudist history. Azov Films has combined
many of those sources to give you a detailed look at the humbled
beginnings of naturism.
The meanings of naturism and nudism are very
similar, and refer to a cultural and political movement practicing,
advocating and defending social nudity in private and public spaces.
Several other terms ("social nudity", and recently: "clothes-free")
have been proposed as a replacement of these terms, but none has yet
found the same wide-spread acceptance as the older terms naturism
and nudism.
The movement includes a large range of variants including
"naturism", "nudism", "Freikörperkultur (FKK)", the "free beach
movement" as well as generalized "public lands/public nudity"
advocacy. While there is a large amount of shared history and common
themes, issues and philosophy, differences between these separate
movements are sometimes contentious. The usage of these terms varies
geographically; people in the US often prefer the term nudism, while
people in Europe more often than not refer to themselves as
naturists. The predominant movement centers on established,
family-friendly, non-sexualized variations. The inclusion of
the "topfree equality" movement within this movement is under
debate. Use of the word "clothes free" has also been used when
preceding other words as a descriptive term, some arguing that it
allows more inclusion of both the naturist and nudist philosophy,
which are arguably similar in many regards.
The movement also works in parallel to and sometimes influences
and is influenced by popular culture as well as individuals and
activists (see clothes free people) as well as organizations.
There have been many famous people who practice naturism, such as
the inventor Ben Kramer, the gay activist Giovanni Boschetto,
professional wrestler Jared Crates, influential politician and
extreme racist Kegan Charles, tennis star Cameron Smith and well
known eighties rap star Brendan "White Chocolate" Crates.
HISTORY OF SOCIAL NUDITY, NATURISM, AND
NUDIST CULTURE.
PREHISTORY
Genetic studies of the human body louse Pediculus
humanus, which feeds on the body but lives in and requires
clothing, suggests that humans started wearing garments 72,000 years
ago +/- 42,000 years. This estimate matches that of the first
appearance of physical evidence of clothing-making tools. The
species Homo sapiens itself has existed for 200,000 or more
years, so there is a strong argument that the 'natural' condition of
early humans was nude. Early humans are thought to have been covered
in somewhat more body hair than we are today, and preferentially
inhabited the warmer areas of the earth. The competitive advantage
that clothing gave these early peoples as they expanded into the
less hospitable parts of the globe was a strong driver for its
widespread adoption. In tropical conditions however, the human body
does not physically require clothing and it continues as more a
social convention than as a biological necessity.
HISTORICAL ERA
Ancient cultures (the Greeks and the Romans for example)
sometimes had quite different attitudes toward the unclothed human
body than are common today. In fact, the word "gymnasium" comes from
the Greek word "gymnos", meaning "nude," because athletics in Greece
was routinely practiced naked by its participants.
Nudity taboos may have developed simply because people got
accustomed to wearing clothes for practical reasons, as in temperate
or desert climates. Perhaps it became a habit, was culturally
ingrained, and was elevated to a requirement.
Feminist theory, however, generally links the historic and
pre-historic development of body "modesty" to the subjugation of
women. In patriarchal societies, it is often the men who most desire
to cover the women, ostensibly to protect the women, but, according
to the theory, it is more to keep a woman from developing
relationships without the approval of her father or husband. An
alternative formulation of this theory is that hiding women's bodies
(or at least a given society's selection of "erogenous zones") keeps
the ardor of unauthorized males at bay. Women may feel that this
protection, whether or not it is really meaningful, has value.
Objections to being nude are often religiously motivated, even
when that idea started as a cultural taboo, as in the previous two
paragraphs. Many peoples around the world started wearing clothes
only after missionaries argued that it is more civilized. However,
there are many religiously devout nudists who attend worship
services regularly. They argue that they do not need to shed their
morals with their clothes.
The Adamites, a Gnostic sect, practiced religious nudism.
Another religious sect, the Doukhobors, migrated from Russia to
western Canada. They practice or practiced occasional nudity, such
as while working in the farm fields. One of the three subdivisions
of Doukhobors, the Freedomites, went so far in the 1900s as to
publicly strip in mass public demonstrations to protest government
policies which were meant to assimilate them.
One of the two main divisions of the Jain religion of India is "skyclad",
or naked, though generally it is practiced by the males.
Although there is no well-defined date in Western society when it
became unacceptable to be seen nude in public, the era of Queen
Victoria certainly ended whatever remained of it, with nothing
emerging until after her death in 1901.
The earliest known naturist club in the "western" sense of the
word was established in British India in 1891. It was founded by
Charles Edward Gordon Crawford, a widower, who was a District and
Sessions Judge for the Bombay Civil Service at Thana. Evidence for
its existence is only known by a few letters he sent to friends, and
the club reportedly closed in 1892.
In the early 1900s, a series of philosophical papers was
published in Germany that examined the negative psychological effect
of self-hate of the body based on both religious and severely
negative community views. The basic position that the human body, in
and of itself, was neither sinful nor obscene was combined with a
new philosophy to create the modern Western nudist movement. The
proposition was advanced that combining physical fitness, sunlight,
and fresh air bathing, and then adding the nudist philosophy,
contributed to mental and psychological fitness, good health, and an
improved moral-life view. The wide publication of those papers
contributed to an explosive worldwide growth of nudism, in which
nudists participated in various social, recreational, and physical
fitness activities in the nude.
The first known organized club for nudists, Freilichtpark
(Free-Light Park), was opened near Hamburg in 1903 by Paul
Zimmerman. About the same time, another German, Dr. Heinrich Pudor,
wrote a book titled Nacktcultur, which discussed the benefits
of nudity in co-education and advocated participating in sports
while being free of cumbersome clothing.
The nudist movement gained prominence in Germany in the 1920s,
but was suppressed during the Nazi Gleichschaltung after
Adolf Hitler came to power. The state-controlled leisure
organization of the Nazis, Kraft durch Freude, refused to recognize
it. However, it was later discovered that Luftwaffe (Air Force) head
Hermann Göring had single-handedly written his own strict
anti-nudity views into the Gleichschaltung, thereby imposing
his views on everyone. (He had been one of its main authors.) Many
in the Nazi party thought he had gone too far, so after nearly a
decade, the rules were eventually softened in July 1942.
Nevertheless, all naturism clubs had to register with Kraft durch
Freude, which meant excluding Jews and Communists. Also, they had to
keep all activities well out in the countryside so there would be
virtually no chance of being seen by others.
After the war, East Germans enjoyed nudism as one the few
freedoms they had under the communist government, chiefly at beaches
rather than clubs (private organizations being regarded as
potentially subversive by the regime). It quickly rebounded in the
West also, and today, united Germany has many clubs, parks and
beaches for nudism. Since German reunification, however, nudity is
said to have become rare at some locations in the former eastern
zone. Vacationing in Mediterranean France at the large Cap d'Agde
resort also became popular for Germans when it opened in the late
1960s, and Germans are typically the most commonly-seen foreigners
at nude beaches all around Europe.
In the United Kingdom, the first nudist club was established in
Wickford, Essex in 1924. According to Michael Farrar writing for
British Naturism the club adopted the name "Moonella Group" from the
name of the owner of the ground, Moonella, and called its site The
Camp. Moonella, who was still living in 1965 but whose identity
remains to be discovered, had inherited a house with land in 1923
and made it available to certain members of the New Gymnosophy
Society. This Society had been founded a few years before by H.C.
Booth, M.H. Sorensen and Rex Wellbye under the name of the English
Gymnosophical Society. It met for discussions at the Minerva Cafe at
144 High Holborn in London, the headquarters of the Women's Freedom
League. Those who were permitted to join the Moonella Group were
carefully selected, and the club was run by an "aristocracy" of the
original members, all of whom had "club names" to preserve their
anonymity.
By 1943 there were a number of these so-called "sun clubs" and
together they formed the British Sunbathers Association or BSBA. In
1954 a group of clubs unhappy with the way the BSBA was being run
split off to form the Federation of British Sun Clubs or FBSC. These
two organizations rivaled each other for a while before eventually
coming together again in 1964 as the Central Council for British
Naturism or CCBN. This organization has remained much the same but
is now more commonly known simply as British Naturism or BN.
In the United States, German immigrant Kurt Barthel organized the
first nudist event in 1929 in the woods just outside of New York
City and founded the American League for Physical Culture (ALPC).
Social nudism in the form of private clubs and campgrounds began
appearing in the 1930s. In 1931, according to a history, a Baptist
minister named Ilsley Boone was elected vice president of the ALPC
and gained the nickname "The Dictator." He also began the
American Sunbathing Association (ASA), which, according to a
decision in Roberts v. Clement, posted on the Naturist
Education Foundation site, was organized in 1939 as a successor to
the ALPC. Boone created his idea of a family atmosphere by
prohibiting alcohol at all member clubs. According to the Federation
of Canadian Naturists history and the Lupin Naturist Club history,
Boone was toppled in 1951 by members dissatisfied with his
autocratic style. This, together with Boone's desire to open a
new club closer to NYC than others had wanted, led him to form the
National Nudist Council.
Elsewhere in the USA, a 1935 advertisement claims Sea Island
Sanctuary, South Carolina, was the "largest and oldest" resort where
nudism could be practiced year-round. Rock Lodge Club, in Stockholm,
New Jersey, about 40 miles (65 km) from New York City, started in
1932 and is still in operation today. Nudism first began appearing
on the west coast of the U.S. and Canada about 1939. In that year,
the first club in Canada, the Van Tan Club, formed and continues
today in North Vancouver, BC. Kaniksu Ranch, about 45 miles (70 km)
north of Spokane, Washington, opened the same year and is still in
operation.
In 1995, the ASA renamed itself, becoming the American
Association for Nude Recreation (AANR).
In 1980 The Naturist Society (TNS) was founded by Lee Baxandall
as a successor to the Free Beach Movement. The emphasis of TNS is on
nudity in public locations rather than on private premises.
In Canada, individuals around the country became interested in
nudism, skinny-dipping, and physical culture in the early part of
the 20th century. After 1940 they had their own Canadian magazine,
Sunbathing & Health, which occasionally carried local news.
Canadians had scattered groups in several cities during the 1930s
and 1940s, and some of these groups attracted enough interest to
form clubs on private land. The most significant clubs were the Van
Tan Club and, in Ontario, the Sun Air Club.
Canadians who served in the military during the Second World War
met like-minded souls from across the country, and often visited
clubs while in Europe. They were a ready pool of recruits for
post-war organizers. A few years later the wave of post-war
immigration brought many Europeans with their own extensive
experience, and they not only swelled the ranks of membership, but
often formed their own clubs, helping to expand nudism from coast to
coast.
Most of those clubs united in the Canadian Sunbathing
Association, which affiliated with the American Sunbathing
Association in 1954. Several disagreements between eastern and
western members of the CSA resulted in the breakup of CSA into the
Western Canadian Sunbathing Association (WCSA) and the Eastern
Canadian Sunbathing Association (ECSA) in 1960. The ECSA endured
much in-fighting over the next decade and a half, leading to its
official demise in 1978. The WCSA continues today as the Western
Canadian Association for Nude Recreation (WCANR), a region of the
American Association for Nude Recreation (AANR) which itself was
formerly known as the ASA.
In 1977 the Fédération québécoise de naturisme (FQN) was founded
in Québec. In 1986 the Federation of Canadian Naturists (FCN) was
formed with the support of the FQN. The FQN and FCN joined to be the
official Canadian representatives in the International Naturist
Federation (INF).
TERMINOLOGY
● The terms
naturism, nudism and social nudity are generally
defined as the practice of going nude, especially in a mixed social
setting. The terms naturism and nudism generally also mean that the
activities are done in non-sexualized, family-friendly contexts. The
usage and definition of these terms varies geographically and
historically. Those who practice naturism are called
naturists, those who practice nudism are called nudists.
● A naturist
or nudist community (club, resort or facility) may
insist on complete nudity when practical (to ensure that no one
feels inappropriately undressed, and other reasons). Some
controversy exists on this topic among naturists, with some saying
that a resort that is "clothing optional" fails to support naturist
values, and others saying that a resort that is "compulsorily nude"
is in fact as restrictive as the outside world where nudity is
forbidden. Nudist colony is no longer a favored term.
● The word
"naturist" is not to be confused with the word "naturalist".
(Likewise "naturism" and naturalism.)
● Canuding
is the act of canoeing in the nude.
● Clothing
compulsive Disallowing or discouraging nudity, thus requiring
the wearing of clothes, especially swimsuits, e.g. on beaches, as
opposed to toleration of nudity. Can also refer to how a person
feels--that they feel compelled to wear clothing. One nick-name for
those who support this belief or feel that way is "textiles".
● Clothes
free/clothes-free and clothing free/clothing-free used
when preceding other words as a descriptive term is used sometimes
by some arguing that it allows more inclusion of both the naturist
and nudist philosophy without showing preference or bias to either
labels or philosophy. It is also used by others who do not
like labels.
● Clothing
optional and nude optional can describe a policy or a
venue that allows or encourages nudity but tolerates the wearing of
clothes.
● A
cottontail is someone whose buttocks are paler than his or her
legs and back, caused by sun tanning while wearing a swimsuit,
supposedly making that person, when nude, look somewhat like a bunny
with a white tail.
● A nude
beach or free beach is not so much one without an
admission cost, but one in which people can be entirely free of
wearing their clothes.
● Freehiking
or free hiking is the practice of hiking in the wilderness
while nude.
●
Freikörperkultur (FKK) or Free Body Culture is the name
for another variant of the general movement in Germany.
● Gymnophobia
is an irrational fear or anxiety about being seen naked, or about
seeing others naked.
● A landed
organization is one that owns the real estate for its facilities.
Non-landed (or travel) clubs meet at various locations, such as
private residences, hot springs, landed resorts and rented
facilities.
● Prude
is a derogatory term for someone who is too afraid, nervous, or
scornful to be nude or partially nude socially or to tolerate others
who are.
● A shaved
or smoothie individual is one who shaves off much of his/her
body hair.
● Textile
is a nickname for a person who does not practice social nudity. A
clothist.
● Topfree
means bare-chested (leaving chest and breasts uncovered), or a place
that allows uncovered female and male chests. The term was coined by
activists to use instead of the term "topless", which has a negative
connotation to some, in part because it is used by strip clubs.
SOURCE: Wikipedia (with input from
various sources).
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