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13 Apr

Is bodybuilding the brand new queer feminist act? Well,

Is bodybuilding the brand new queer feminist act? Well,
Female bodybuilders exist outside of traditional notions of femininity, with some positioning it as a queer and feminist act. Nevertheless it’s a bit more nuanced than that When Love Lies Bleeding comes out in May, it would shine a highlight on a version of femininity and the feminine body that we don’t often get to see in mainstream media. The erotic thriller, starring Kristen Stewart and Katy M O’Brien, centres around a queer relationship between bodybuilder Jackie and Lou, a gym manager, and follows because the two get tousled with Lou’s criminal family.  Together with her ripped, muscular body, sculpted six-pack and beefy arms, Katy – like many female athletes – is antithetical to...
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12 Apr

Is bodybuilding the brand new queer feminist act? Well,

Is bodybuilding the brand new queer feminist act? Well,
Female bodybuilders exist outside of traditional notions of femininity, with some positioning it as a queer and feminist act. Nevertheless it’s a bit more nuanced than that When Love Lies Bleeding comes out in May, it should shine a highlight on a version of femininity and the feminine body that we don’t often get to see in mainstream media. The erotic thriller, starring Kristen Stewart and Katy M O’Brien, centres around a queer relationship between bodybuilder Jackie and Lou, a gym manager, and follows because the two get twisted up with Lou’s criminal family.  Along with her ripped, muscular body, sculpted six-pack and beefy arms, Katy – like many female athletes – is antithetical...
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29 Aug

How Kathy Acker’s bodybuilding fuelled her raucous art

How Kathy Acker’s bodybuilding fuelled her raucous art
The mind and body are sometimes regarded as separate, even opposing, entities. But for writers like Acker and Eileen Myles, exercise and movement change into powerful aids within the creation of their art The caricatured image of an artist doesn’t typically involve a Schwarzenegger-esque physique. But buff artists do exist. American author Kathy Acker, a raucous avant-garde superstar carved with muscles, was certainly one of them. For her, bodybuilding was a strategy to play with identity and a mechanism to reconcile physical and mental pursuits.  In a world that increasingly devalues embodied practices in favour of digital interactions and virtual experiences, we have gotten ever more distanced from our own physicality and, in consequence,...
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