205
Arguments in Support of Naturism
Preface
THE
UNITED STATES LAGS FAR BEHIND most of the rest of Western Civilization in its
negative attitude toward the human body. While most of Europe is comfortable
with the concept of nude recreation on beaches and in vacation resorts, here in
the U.S., conservative political action groups seek to criminalize even the most
innocent exposure of the human body. Often these groups gain support by
purporting to defend "family values" or "Christian
morality."
Although these groups are growing in political power, they represent only a
small portion of the American population. And participation in nude recreation
is also growing. More and more Americans are discovering the pleasures of
skinny-dipping with their families in the local reservoir, or sunbathing in the
buff at the local beach. Membership in nudist organizations is growing by leaps
and bounds.
More than ever, Naturists need powerful arguments to defend their chosen
lifestyle against those who cannot see beyond their own misconceptions and
preconceived notions. We need evidence and testimony to encourage others to give
Naturism a try. For several years, I found myself making claims like these:
·
"Actually, Mom, taking the
kids to a nudist park is good for them."
·
"The ideals of Naturism are
consistent with the goals of women's rights."
·
"A lot of famous people
don't think skinny dripping's such a bad thing."
·
"There's nothing in the
Bible that says it's wrong to go nude."
·
"Naturism has some real
psychological benefits."
·
"Not everyone in the world
thinks nudity is so bad, you know."
I
knew that these statements were true, but when pressed, I could not back them up
with concrete references. And so, this project was born. Here are all the
arguments in support of Naturism, backed up by up-to-date scientific research
and supported by the writings of leading thinkers in psychology, sociology,
history, law, and philosophy. Here also you will find related musings on
subjects including modesty, nudity in art, the history of fashion, women's
rights, the benefits of breast-feeding, and the psychology of clothing.
This
compilation draws on sources including nudist and mainstream publications,
scholarly research, and my own thought. Some arguments are stronger than others.
Taken as a whole, I think they make a compelling case in favor of Naturism. They
support a perspective that sees the human body as complete and good in and of
itself, regardless of how-or whether-it is adorned. They support an honest,
open, and accepting attitude toward the human body, a perspective that is
physically, mentally, and spiritually healing, socially constructive, and
thoroughly freeing.
This
compilation is by no means complete or comprehensive. All ideas, suggestions,
comments, corrections, additions, references, and insights are welcome! Many of
these quotes and ideas are taken from other sources or excerpted from larger
works. An extensive bibliography and endnotes are included at the end of the
document, and I strongly encourage anyone who is interested to refer to the
original sources for more information.
These
ideas should be shared freely. Every mother concerned about "family
values" should know about the extensive scientific research demonstrating
the positive benefits of nudism for children. Every woman concerned about
pornography should know how strongly the philosophy and practice of Naturism
repudiates the objectification of women's bodies. Every lawmaker concerned about
honoring the original intent of our nation's founders should know that many of
them were unabashed skinny-dippers. Christians concerned about upholding sexual
morality should know that the earliest Church leaders accepted nudity as a
natural part of life, and not in the least inconsistent with the teachings of
Christ. The world-weary businessman in his urban office and three-piece suit
should know how relaxing and therapeutic a weekend at a nudist park can be. The
mother on the beach with sand in her swimming suit should know that there are
places in the world where she may enjoy the feeling of sun and water on her body
without attracting unwanted attention.
It is my hope that this document may help you to share this good news, and to speak articulately about the native goodness of the human body in its natural state.
Nudity is often more comfortable and practical than clothing
1.
There are times when clothing is physically uncomfortable. Nudity, on the other
hand, is often much more comfortable.
2.
For many activities, nudity is often far more practical than clothing.
Bernard
Rudofsky writes: "The custom of wearing a bathing suit, a desperate attempt
to recapture some of our lost innocence, represents a graphic expression of
white man's hypocrisy. For, obviously, the bathing suit is irrelevant to any
activity in and under water. It neither keeps us dry or warm, nor is it an aid
to swimming. If the purpose of bathing is to get wet, the bathing suit does not
make us wetter. At best, it is a social dress, like the dinner jacket."
Yet Americans spend $900,000,000 each year on bathing costumes.
3.
Clothing also restricts movement, and encumbers the athlete. Studies done by the
West German Olympic swim team showed that even swimsuits slow down a swimmer.
Naturism promotes mental health
4.
A nudist is not a body lacking something (that is, clothing). Rather, a clothed
person is a whole and complete naked body, plus clothes.
5.
Many psychologists say that clothing is an extension of ourselves. The clothes
we wear are an expression of who we are. The Naturist's comfort with casual
nudity, therefore, represents an attitude which is comfortable with the self as
it is in its most basic state, without modification or deceit.
6.
Clothes-compulsiveness creates insecurity about one's body. Studies show that
nudism, on the other hand, promotes a positive body self-concept.
These
effects are especially significant for women. Studies by Daniel DeGoede in 1984
confirmed research done 16 years earlier, which established that "of all
the groups measured (nudist males, non-nudist males, nudist females, and
non-nudist females), the nudist females scored highest on body concept, and the
non-nudist females scored lowest."
7.
Nudism promotes wholeness of body, rather than setting aside parts of the body
as unwholesome and shameful.
8.
Clothes-compulsiveness locks us into a constant battle between individuality and
conformity of dress. Nudity frees us from this anxiety, by fostering a climate
of comfortable individuality without pretense.
9.
The practice of nudism is, for nudists, an immensely freeing experience. In
freeing oneself to be nude in the presence of others, including members of the
other sex, the nudist also gives up all the social baggage that goes along with
the nudity taboo.
The
North American Guide to Nude Recreation notes that "one reason why a nude
lifestyle is so refreshing is that it delivers us temporarily from the game of
clothes. It's hard to imagine how much clothing contributes to the grip of daily
tensions until we see what it's like to socialize without them. Clothing locks
us into a collective unreality that prescribes complex responses to social
status, roles and expected behaviors. In shedding our daily 'uniforms,' we also
shed a weighty burden of anxieties. For a while, at least, we don't have to play
the endless charade of projected images we call 'daily life.' . . .
For once in your life you are part of a situation where age, occupation and
social status don't really count for much. You'll find yourself relating more on
the basis of who you really are instead of who your clothes say you are."
This analysis is borne out by experience.
10.
The sense of "freedom" that comes from the nudist experience is
consistently rated by nudists as one of the main reasons they stay in it.
11.
Nudism, by freeing the body, helps free the mind and spirit. An irrational
clothes-compulsiveness may inhibit psychological growth and health.
Dr.
Robert Henley Woody writes, "fear of revealing one's body is a defense. To
keep clothing on at all times when it is unnecessary for social protocol or
physical comfort is to armour oneself in a manner that will block new behaviors
that could introduce more healthful and rewarding alternatives; and promote
psychological growth."
12.
The nudist, literally, has nothing to hide. He or she therefore has less stress,
a fact supported by research.
In
the words of Paul Ableman: "Removing your clothes symbolizes 'taking off'
civilization and its cares. The nudist is stripped not only of garments but of
the need to 'dress a part,' of form and display, of ceremony and all the
constraints of a complex etiquette. . . . Further than this, the
nudist symbolically takes off a great burden of responsibility. By taking off
his clothes, he takes off the pressing issues of his day. For the time being, he
is no longer committed to causes, opposed to this or that trend, in short a
citizen. He becomes . . . a free being once more."
13.
Clothing hides the natural diversity of human body shapes and sizes. When people
are never exposed to nudity, they grow up with misunderstandings and unrealistic
expectations about the body based on biased or misinformed sources-for
instance, from advertising or mass media.
As
a result, breast augmentation has long been the leading form of cosmetic surgery
in the U.S. In the 1980s, American women had more than 100,000 operations per
year to alter their breasts. Helen Gurley Brown, past editor of Cosmopolitan,
says, "I don't think 80 percent of the women in this country have any idea
what other women's bosoms look like. They have this idealized idea of how other
people's bosoms are. . . . My God, isn't it ridiculous to be an
emancipated woman and not really know what a woman's body looks like except your
own?" Paul Fussell notes, by contrast, that "a little time spent
on Naturist beaches will persuade most women that their breasts and hips are
not, as they may think when alone, appalled by their mirrors, 'abnormal,' but
quite natural, 'abnormal' ones belonging entirely to the nonexistent creatures
depicted in ideal painting and sculpture. The same with men: if you think nature
has been unfair to you in the sexual anatomy sweepstakes, spend some time among
the Naturists. You will learn that every man looks roughly the same-quite
small, that is, and that heroic fixtures are not just extremely rare, they are
deformities."
14.
Clothing hides and therefore creates mystery and ignorance about natural body
processes, such as pregnancy, adolescence, and aging. Children (and even adults)
who grow up in a nudist environment have far less anxiety about these natural
processes than those who are never exposed to them.
Margaret
Mead writes, "clothes separate us from our own bodies as well as from the
bodies of others. The more society . . . muffles the human body in
clothes . . . camouflages pregnancy . . . and hides
breastfeeding, the more individual and bizarre will be the child's attempts to
understand, to piece together a very imperfect knowledge of the life-cycle of
the two sexes and an understanding of the particular state of maturity of his or
her body."
Some observations on the nature of modesty
15.
Children are not born with any shame about nudity. They learn to be ashamed of
their own nudity.
16.
Shame, with respect to nudity, is relative to individual situations and customs,
not absolute.
For
example, an Arab woman, encountered in a state of undress, will cover her face,
not her body; she bares her breasts without embarrassment, but believes the
sight of the back of her head to be still more indecent than exposure of her
face. (James Laver notes that "an Arab peasant woman caught in the fields
without her veil will throw her skirt over her head, thereby exposing what, to
the Western mind, is a much more embarrassing part of her anatomy.") In
early Palestine, women were obliged to keep their heads covered; for a woman, to
be surprised outside the house without a head-covering was a sufficient reason
for divorce. In pre-revolutionary China it was shameful for a woman to show her
foot, and in Japan, the back of her neck. In 18th-century France, while deep décolletage
was common, it was improper to expose the point of the shoulder. Herr Surén,
writing in 1924, noted that Turkish women veiled their faces, Chinese women hid
their feet, Arab women covered the backs of their heads, and Filipino women
considered only the navel indecent.
The
relative nature of shame is acknowledged by Pope John Paul II. "There is a
certain relativism in the definition of what is shameless," he writes.
"This relativism may be due to differences in the makeup of particular
persons . . . or to different 'world views.' It may equally be due to
differences in external conditions-in climate for instance . . . and
also in prevailing customs, social habits, etc. . . . In this matter
there is no exact similarity in the behavior of particular people, even if they
live in the same age and the same society. . . . Dress is always a
social question."
17.
The dominant idea that clothing is necessary for reasons of modesty is a
cultural assumption. It is an assumption that is not shared by all cultures, nor
by all members of our own culture.
18.
There is evidence that modesty is not related to nakedness at all, but is rather
a response to appearing different from the rest of the social group-for
instance, outside the accepted habits of clothing or adornment.
For
example, indigenous tribes naked except for ear and lip plugs feel immodest when
the plugs are removed, not when their bodies are exposed. Likewise, a woman
feels immodest if seen in her slip, even though it's far less revealing than her
bikini. This also explains why clothed visitors to nudist parks feel
uncomfortable in their state of dress. Psychologist Emery S. Bogardus writes:
"Nakedness is never shameful when it is unconscious, that is, when there is
no consciousness of a difference between fact and the rule set by the
mores." In other words, for first-time visitors to a nudist park, there is
no hint of embarrassment after an initial reticence, because it is not contrary
to the moral norms.
19.
Shame comes from being outside mores, not from specific actions or conditions.
Because nudity is unremarkable in a nudist setting, nudists may even forget that
they are nude-and often do.
20.
Psychological studies have shown that modesty need not be related to one's state
of dress at all. For the nudist, modesty is not shed with one's clothes; it
merely takes a different form.
Psychological
studies by Martin Weinberg concluded that the basic difference between nudists
and non-nudists lies in their differently-constructed definitions of the
situation. It isn't that nudists are immodest, for, like non-nudists, they have
norms to regulate and control immorality, sexuality, and embarrassment. Nudists
merely accept the human body as natural, rather than as a source of
embarrassment.
21.
Many indigenous tribes go completely naked without shame, even today. It is only
through extended contact with the "modern" world that they learn to be
"modest."
Paul
Ableman writes: "The missionaries were usually disconcerted to find that
the biblically recommended act of 'clothing the naked', far from producing an
improvement in native morals, almost always resulted in a deterioration. What
the missionaries were inadvertently doing was recreating the Garden of Eden
situation. Naked, the primitive cultures had shown no prurient concern with the
body. . . . the morality was normally geared to the naked state of the
culture. The missionaries, with their cotton shorts and dresses, disrupted this.
Naked people actually feel shame when they are first dressed. They develop an
exaggerated awareness of the body. It is as if Adam and Eve's 'aprons' generated
the 'knowledge of good and evil' rather than being its consequence."
Many
Amazon rainforest people still live clothing-optional by choice, even given an
alternative. The same is true of the aborigines of central Australia.
22.
Even in North America, nudity was commonplace among many indigenous tribes prior
to the arrival of Europeans.
Lewis
and Clark reported nearly-naked natives along the northern Pacific coast, for
example, as did visitors to California. Father Louis Hennepin in 1698 reported
of Milwaukee-area Illinois Indians, "They go stark naked in Summer-time,
wearing only a kind of Shoes made of the Skins of [buffalo] Bulls." He
described several other North American tribes as also generally living without
clothes. The natives of Florida wore only breechclouts and sashes of Spanish
moss, which they removed while hunting or gardening. Columbus wrote of the
Indians he encountered in the Caribbean in 1492, "They all go around as
naked as their mothers bore them; and also the women." The Polynesian
natives of Hawaii wore little clothing, and none at all at the shore or in the
water, until the arrival of Christian missionaries with Captain Cook in 1776.
23.
For some indigenous tribes, nudity or near-nudity is an essential part of their
culture.
Paul
Ableman explains, "very few primitives are totally naked. They almost
always have ornamentation or body-modification of some kind, which plays a
central role in their culture. . . . Into this simple but successful
culture comes the missionary, and obliterates the key signs beneath his cheap
Western clothing. Among many primitives, tattooing, scarification and
ornamentation convey highly elaborate information which may, in fact, be the
central regulatory force in the society. The missionary thus, at one blow,
annihilates a culture. It was probably no less traumatic for a primitive society
to be suddenly clothed than it would be for ours to be suddenly stripped
naked."
24.
Yet missionaries have consistently sought to impose their own concepts of
"decency" on other cultures, ignoring the elaborate cultural
traditions regarding dress already in place.
Bernard
Rudofsky writes: "People [in other cultures] who traditionally do not have
much use for clothes are not amused by the missionary zeal that prompts us to
press our notions of decency upon them while being insensitive or opposed to
theirs." Julian Robinson adds: "Eighteenth and nineteenth
century missionaries and colonial administrators were blissfully blind to their
own religious, cultural and sexual prejudices, and to the symbolism of their own
tribal adornments-their tight-laced corsets, powdered wigs, constricting shoes
and styles of outer garments totally unsuited to colonial life. These
missionaries and administrators nevertheless took it upon themselves to expunge
all those 'pagan, barbaric and savage forms of body packaging' which did not
conform to their body covering standards. . . . Thus the social and
symbolic significance of these traditional forms of body decoration which had
evolved over countless generations were, in many cases, destroyed forever."
Russell
Nansen records that "Henry Morton Stanley, the rescuer of David Livingstone
in the Belgian Congo. . . . from 1847 to 1877 . . . wandered
across Africa suffering every hardship but when he went back to England he made
a notable speech to the Manchester Chamber of Commerce. He explained to the
audience how many natives there were in the Congo, and the fact that they lived
naked. He told the audience that their duty as Christians was to convert these
misguided naked savages to Christianity and to the wearing of clothes. And when
this missionary work had progressed sufficiently to convince the natives of the
need for wearing clothes on Sunday, that would mean three hundred and twenty
million yards of Manchester cotton cloth yearly. Instantly the audience rose to
its feet and cheered him."
25.
Most anthropologists consider modesty an unlikely reason for the development of
clothes.
J.C.
Flügel writes: "The great majority of scholars . . . have
unhesitatingly regarded decoration as the motive that led, in the first place,
to the adoption of clothing, and consider that the warmth- and
modesty-preserving functions of dress, however important they might later on
become, were only discovered once the wearing of clothes had become habitual for
other reasons. . . . The anthropological evidence consists chiefly in
the fact that among the most primitive races there exist unclothed but not
undecorated peoples." Anthropologists agree nearly unanimously on
this point.
26.
Many psychologists and anthropologists believe that modesty about exposure of
the body may well be a result of wearing clothes, rather than its cause.
27.
It is interesting to note that it is only possible to be immodest once an
accepted form of modesty has been established.
28.
Modesty with respect to nudity is a social phenomenon, not biologically
instinctive. This is evidenced by the fact that nudity is venerated in art.
Naturism promotes sexual health
29.
Nudity is not, by itself, erotic, and nudity in mixed groups is not inherently
sexual. These are myths propagated by a clothes-obsessed society. Sexuality is a
matter of intent rather than state of dress.
In
our culture, a person who exposes their sexual parts for any reason is
considered to be an exhibitionist. It is assumed that they stripped to attract
attention and cause a sexual reaction in others. This is seen as a perversion.
Hypocritically, if someone dresses specifically to arouse sexual
interest, they are considered to have pride in their appearance. Even if they
get great sexual gratification out of the attention others give, there is no
suggestion of perversion or sexual fixation.
30.
Nudists, as a group, are healthier sexually than the general population.
Nudists
are, as a rule, far more comfortable with their bodies than the general public,
and this contributes to a more relaxed and comfortable attitude toward sexuality
in general.
31.
Sexual satisfaction in married couples shows a correlation to their degree of
comfort with nudity.
32.
Studies show significantly less incidence of casual premarital and extramarital
sex, group sex, incest, and rape among nudists than among non-nudists.
33.
Studies have demonstrated that countries with fewer hangups about nudity have
lower teen pregnancy and abortion rates.
34.
Clothes enhance sexual mystery and the potential for unhealthy sexual fantasies.
Photographer
Jock Sturges says, "our arbitrary demarcations [between clothing and
nudity, sexual and asexual] serve more to confound our collective sexual
identity than to further our social progress. America sells everything with sex
and then recoils when presented with the realities of natural process."
C. Willet Cunnington writes: "We have to thank the Early Fathers for
having, albeit unwillingly, established a mode of thinking from which men and
women have developed an art which has supplied . . . so many novel
means of exciting the sexual appetite. Prudery, it seems, provides mankind with
endless aphrodisiacs, hence, no doubt, the reluctance to abandon it."
35.
Clothing focuses attention on sexuality, not away from it; and in fact often
enhances immature forms of sexuality, rather than promoting healthy body
acceptance.
36.
Complete nudity is antithetic to the elaborate semi-pornography of the fashion
industry.
Julian
Robinson observes, "modesty is so intertwined with sexual desire and the
need for sexual display-fighting but at the same time re-kindling this desire-that
a self-perpetuating process is inevitably set in motion. In fact modesty can
never really attain its ultimate end except through its disappearance. Hiding
under the cloak of modesty there are to be found many essential components of
the sexual urge itself."
37.
Clothing often focuses attention on the genitals and sexual arousal, rather than
away from them.
At
various times in Western history different parts of female anatomy have been
eroticized: bellies and thighs in the Renaissance; buttocks, breasts, and thighs
by the late 1800s (and relatively diminutive waists and bellies). Underwear
design has historically emphasized these erogenous body parts: corsets in the
1800s de-emphasized the midriff and emphasized the breasts-using materials
including whalebone and steel; the crinoline in the mid 1800s emphasized the
waist; and the bustle, appearing in 1868, emphasized the buttocks. Bathing suit
design today focuses attention on the breasts and pubic region.
E.B.
Hurlock writes: "When primitive peoples are unaccustomed to wearing
clothing, putting it on for the first time does not decrease their immorality,
as the ladies of missionary societies think it will. It has just the opposite
effect. It draws attention to the body, especially for those parts of it which
are covered for the first time." Rob Boyte notes wryly that
"textile people, when they do strip in front of others, usually do it for
passion, and find the bikini pattern tan-lines attractive. This is reminiscent
of the scarification practiced by primitive societies, and shows how clothing
patterns become a fetish of the body." Havelock Ellis writes:
"If the conquest of sexual desire were the first and last consideration of
life it would be more reasonable to prohibit clothing than to prohibit
nakedness."
38.
The fashion industry depends on the sex appeal of clothing.
Peter
Fryer writes: "The changes in women's fashions are basically determined by
the need to maintain men's sexual interest, and therefore to transfer the
primary zone of erotic display once a given part of the body has been saturated
with attractive power to the point of satiation. . . . Each new
fashion seeks to arouse interest in a new erogenous zone to replace the zone
which, for the time being, is played out."
39.
Differences of clothing between the sexes focus attention on sex differences.
Psychologist
J.C. Flügel writes: "There seems to be (especially in modern life) no
essential factor in the nature, habits, or functions of the two sexes that would
necessitate a striking difference of costume-other than the desire to
accentuate sex differences themselves; an accentuation that chiefly serves the
end of more easily and frequently arousing sexual passion."
40.
Many psychologists believe that clothing may originally have developed, in part,
as a means of focusing sexual attention.
41.
Partial clothing is more sexually stimulating (in often unhealthy ways) than
full nudity.
Anne
Hollander writes: "The more significant clothing is, the more meaning
attaches to its absence and the more awareness is generated about any relation
between the two states." Elizabeth B. Hurlock notes that "it is
unquestionably a well-known fact that familiar things arouse no curiosity, while
concealment lends enchantment and stimulates curiosity . . . a draped
figure with just enough covering to suggest the outline, is far more alluring
than a totally naked body." And Lee Baxandall observes, "the
'almost'-nude beaches, where bikinis and thongs are paraded, are more sexually
titillating than a clothes-optional resort or beach. What is natural is more
fulfilling, though it may not fit the tantalize-and-deliver titillation of our
consumer culture."
42.
Modesty-especially enforced modesty-only adds to sexual
interest and desire.
Reena
Glazer writes: "Women's breasts are sexually stimulating to (heterosexual)
men, at least in part because they are publicly inaccessible; society further
eroticizes the female breast by tagging it shameful to expose. . . .
This element of the forbidden merely perpetuates the intense male reaction
female exposure allegedly inspires."
43.
Topfree inequality (requiring women, but not men, to wear tops) produces an
unhealthy obsession with breasts as sexual objects.
44.
The identification of breasts as sexual objects in our culture has led to the
discouragement of breast-feeding, the encouragement of unnecessary cosmetic
surgery for breast augmentation, and avoidance of necessary breast examinations
by women.
Sydney
Ross Singer and Soma Grismaijer write: "When a woman learns to treat her
breasts as objects that enhance appearance, they belong not to the woman, but to
her viewers. Thus, a woman becomes alienated from her own body."
45.
Naturism is the antithesis of pornography.
Nudity
is often confused with pornography in our society because the pornography
industry has so successfully exploited it. In other words, nudity is often
damned as exploitative precisely because its repression causes many to exploit
it.
46.
Pornography has been defined as an attempt to exert power over nature. In most
cases in our culture, it manifests itself as an expression of sexual power by
men over women. Naturism, by contrast, seeks to coexist with nature and with
each other, and to accept each other and the natural world in our most natural
states.
47.
Non-acceptance and repression of nudity fuels pornography by teaching that any
form and degree of nudity is inherently sexual and pornographic.
In
the words of activist Melissa Farley, "pornography is the antithesis of
freedom for women. . . . to treat the human body as anything less than
normal and beautiful is to promote puritanism and pornography. If the human body
is accepted by society as normal, the pornographers won't be able to market
it."
48.
Naturism is innocent, casual, non-exploitative, and non-commercial (and yet is
often suppressed); as opposed to pornography, which is commercialized and
sensationalized (and generally tolerated).
In
some American communities it is illegal for a woman to publicly bare her breasts
in order to feed an infant, but it is legal to display Penthouse on drug-store
magazine racks.
49.
Many psychologists believe that repression of a healthy sexuality leads to a
greater capacity for, and tendency toward, violence.
Paul
Ableman writes: "We have divorced ourselves from our instincts so
conclusively that we are now menaced by their perverted expression. The blocked
erotic instinct turns into destructiveness and, in our age, many thinkers have
perceived that some of the most ghastly manifestations of human culture are
fueled by recycled eroticism. Channelled into pure cerebration, the sexual
instinct may generate nightmares impossible in the animal world. Animals are
casually cruel and are usually, not always, indifferent to the pain of other
animals. Animals kills for food or, rarely, for sport but they do not torture,
gloat over pain or exterminate. We do. What's more, we can tolerate our own
ferocity. What we cannot tolerate is our own sexuality."
Thus
extreme violence is tolerated even on television, while the merest glimpse of
sexual anatomy, however innocent, is enough to cause movie ratings to jump.
Naturism promotes physical health
50.
Clothing limits or defeats many of the natural purposes of skin: for example,
repelling moisture, drying quickly, breathing, protecting without impeding
performance, and especially sensing one's environment.
C.
W. Saleeby writes: "This admirable organ, the natural clothing of the body,
which grows continually throughout life, which has at least four absolutely
distinct sets of sensory nerves distributed to it, which is essential in the
regulation of the temperature, which is waterproof from without inwards, but
allows the excretory sweat to escape freely, which, when unbroken, is
microbe-proof, and which can readily absorb sunlight-this most beautiful,
versatile, and wonderful organ is, for the most part, smothered, blanched, and
blinded in clothes and can only gradually be restored to the air and light which
are its natural surroundings. Then, and only then, we learn what it is capable
of."
51.
Exposure to the sun, without going overboard, promotes general health.
Research
suggests that solar exposure triggers the body's synthesis of Vitamin D, vital
for (among other things) calcium absorption and a strong immune system. Exposure
to the sun is especially essential for the growth of strong bones in young
children.
52.
Recent research has suggested an inverse relationship between solar exposure and
osteoporosis, colon cancer, breast cancer, and even the most deadly form of skin
cancer, malignant melanoma.
53.
An obsessive sense of modesty about the body often correlates with a reluctance
to share healthy forms of touch with others.
Research
has increasingly linked touch-deprivation, especially during childhood and
adolescence, to depression, violence, sexual inhibition, and other antisocial
behaviors. Research has also shown that people who are physically cold toward
adolescents produce hostile, aggressive, and often violent offspring. On the
other hand, children brought up in families where the members touch each other
are healthier, better able to withstand pain and infection, more sociable, and
generally happier than families that don't share touch.
54.
Tight clothing may cause health problems by restricting the natural flow of
blood and lymphatic fluid.
Recent
research by Sydney Ross Singer and Soma Grismaijer demonstrated that women who
wear bras more than twelve hours per day, but not to bed, are 21 times more
likely to get breast cancer than those who wear bras less than twelve hours per
day. Those who wear bras even to bed are 125 times more likely to get breast
cancer than those who don't wear bras at all. Testicular cancer, similarly, has
been linked to tight briefs. The theory is that tight clothing impedes the lymph
system, which removes cancer-causing toxins from the body.
55.
Clothing can harbor disease-causing bacteria and yeast (especially underclothing
and athletic clothing).
56.
Medical research has linked clothing to an increased susceptibility to bites and
stings by animals such as ticks and sea lice, which hide in or get trapped in
clothing.
57.
Clothing fashions throughout history, especially for women, have often been
damaging to physical and psychological health.
For
instance, the wearing of corsets led to numerous physical ailments in women in
the late 19th century. Men and women both suffered through many ages of history
under hot, burdensome layers of clothing in the name of fashion. Footwear has
been especially notorious for resisting reason and comfort in the name of
fashion.
58.
The idea that clothing is necessary for support of the genitals or breasts is
often unwarranted.
For
example, research shows that the choice of wearing a bra or not has no bearing
on the tendency of a woman's breasts to "droop" as she ages. Deborah
Franklin writes: "Still, the myth that daily, lifelong bra wearing is
crucial to preserving curves persists, along with other misguided notions about
that fetching bit of binding left over from the days when a wasp waist defined
the contours of a woman's power." Christine Haycock, of the New Jersey
Medical School, says that while exercising without a bra may be uncomfortable
for large-breasted women, "it's not doing any lasting damage to chest
muscles or breast tissue." In fact, given the tendency of sports bras to
squash breasts against the rib cage, her research concluded that "those who
wore an A cup were frequently most comfortable with no bra at all."
Complete nudity presents no difficulties for conditioned male athletes, either;
and thus the athletes of ancient Athens had no trouble performing entirely in
the nude.
59.
Clothing hides the natural beauty of the human body, as created by God.
In
the words of Michelangelo: "What spirit is so empty and blind, that it
cannot grasp the fact that the human foot is more noble than the shoe and human
skin more beautiful than the garment with which it is clothed?"
60.
Clothing makes people look older, and emphasizes rather than hides unflattering
body characteristics.
Paul
Fussell writes: "Nude, older people look younger, especially when very tan,
and younger people look even younger. . . . In addition fat people
look far less offensive naked than clothed. Clothes, you realize, have the
effect of sausage casings, severely defining and advertising the shape of what
they contain, pulling it all into an unnatural form which couldn't fool anyone.
. . . The beginning Naturist doesn't take long to master the paradox
that it is stockings that make varicose veins noticeable, belts that call
attention to forty-eight-inch waists, brassieres that emphasize sagging
breasts."
61.
Clothing harbors and encourages the growth of odor-causing bacteria.
Naturism is socially constructive
62.
Naturism is a socially constructive philosophy.
As
defined by the International Naturist Federation, "Naturism is a way of
life in harmony with nature characterized by the practice of communal nudity,
with the intention of encouraging self-respect, respect for others and for the
environment."
63.
Naturism, by philosophy, is tolerant of others and their differences. It expects
only the same in return.
Naturism
rejects obstreperous, provocative nudity-but because it is anti-social
effrontery and disorderly conduct, not because it is nudity.
64.
Nudity promotes social equality, feelings of unity with others, and more relaxed
social interaction in general. As mentioned earlier, clothing locks us into a
collective unreality that prescribes complex responses to social status, roles
and expected behaviors. As the artificial barrier of clothing is done away with,
social class and status disappear. People begin to relate to each other as they
are, and not as they seem to be.
This
is a phenomenon that is intimately familiar to the Finnish people. L.M.
Edelsward writes: "People can relax in the sauna in a way that is difficult
to do in other contexts and with others than one's family, for here the tensions
associated with maintaining one's social mask disappear. . . . Without
their social masks, sauna bathers are able to meet others not in terms of their
social personas, but in terms of their inner personalities. . . .
Sweating together in the sauna, removed from the impinging demands of ordinary
life, Finns can be the people they 'really' are, and can recreate their
relationships with others as they ideally should be-open, equal, and trusting.
. . . Sweating together in the sauna, stripped of all symbols of rank,
wealth or prestige, all are equal; distance and respect become openness and
sincerity."
65.
Naturists tend to be especially accepting of other people, just as they are.
This is an attitude that is undoubtedly related to the fact that Naturists are
generally more accepting of their own bodies, just as they are, than the general
public.
66.
Socially and demographically, nudists are almost exactly like the rest of the
population, except that they are tolerant of nudity. There are few other trends,
social or psychological, positive or negative, that correlate to a statistically
significant degree with nudists as a demographic group.
67.
Naturism rejects blind conformity to cultural mores and assumptions about the
body, which see clothing as a constant necessity, in favor of a more reasoned,
rational approach which recognizes the need for clothing to be dependent on
context.
68.
For Americans, non-acceptance and sexualization of their own nudity encourages a
biased or racist attitude contrasting "clothed civilization" against
the "naked savage."
Rob
Boyte asks, "Why is it permissible [in National Geographic] to show
the penis and scrotum of an African Surma (Feb. 91) or a Brazilian Urueu-Wau Wau
(Dec. 88) but not a Yugoslav Naturist in his natural setting? Why are
photographs of breasts on Nuba (Feb. 51, Nov. 66), Zulu (Aug. 53), Dyak (May
56), Masai (Feb. 65), Yap Island (May 67, Oct. 86), Turkana (Feb. 69), Adama
Islands (July 75), New Guinea (Aug. 82), Woodabe (Oct. 83), Ndebele (Feb. 69),
and Surma (Feb. 91) women shown, yet not one white Canadian can be found to face
the camera at Wreck Beach? Why are the breasts shown of Josephine Baker (July
89), a black native of East St. Louis, but the breasts of white native women of
Miami Beach are not shown? The unanswered question implies but one conclusion:
that the National Geographic has in fact a Eurocentric bias (racist) in
portraying nudity."
Jeremy
Seabrook writes: "The absence of self-consciousness is not some natural
'primitive' impulse to acknowledge the universal truth that sex is the centre of
their world. . . . The nakedness of tradition speaks of a social order
in which sex, although not denied, has its place in the totality of living and
growing things; it speaks of another ordering of the world, one that is a
reproach to, and denial of, those nude westerners [vacationing on nude beaches
far from home], although at the same time, is dismissed, marginalised, not taken
seriously by them."
Naturism is healthy for the family
69.
True nudists emphasize a decent, family atmosphere and morality.
70.
Research shows that children who grow up in a nudist setting tend to be more
self-confident, more self-accepting, and more sexually well-adjusted. They feel
better about their bodies, and more comfortable with their sexuality.
Research
conducted at the University of Northern Iowa found that nudist children had body
self-concepts that were significantly more positive than those of non-nudist
children-and that the "nudity classification" of a family was one of
the most significant factors associated with positive body self-concept.
Furthermore, nudist children showed a significantly higher acceptance of their
bodies as a whole, rather than feeling ashamed of certain parts. A study by
psychologists Robin Lewis and Louis Janda at Old Damien University reported that
"increased exposure to nudity in the family fosters an atmosphere of
acceptance of sexuality and one's body." They concluded that children who
had seen their parents nude were more comfortable with physical contact and
affection, had higher self-esteem, and showed increased acceptance of and
comfort with their bodies and their sexuality. Research by Marie-Louise Booth at
the California School of Professional Psychology found that "individuals
with less childhood exposure to parental nudity experienced significantly higher
levels of adult sexual anxiety than did the group with more childhood exposure
to parental nudity." Separate research by Diane Lee Wilson at The
Wright Institute reached the same conclusion. Research by Lou Lieberman of the
State University of New York at Albany, in the late 1960s, found that
"those young people who had casually seen both of their parents nude in the
home were far more likely to feel comfortable with their bodies and to also feel
more satisfied with the size and shape of their genitalia and breasts."
71.
In general, "experts" such as Joyce Brothers and Dr. Spock speak out
against family nudity without empirical evidence to back them up. When research
is actually done, it contradicts their dire warnings.
In
several years of research at major national research libraries, I have yet to
come across a scientific study which contradicts the premise that openness about
nudity is healthy for children.
72.
Most commentators say that it's the context in which family nudity takes place,
not the nudity itself, that determines whether it's problematic. Children
respond far more to parents' attitudes toward nudity than to the nudity
itself, and nudity is only a problem when it is treated as one.
73.
Many psychologists argue that the implicit message conveyed by a lack of nudity
in the home is that the body is basically unacceptable or shameful-an attitude
which may carry over into discomfort about nudity in the context of adult sexual
relationships.
74.
Children of "primitive" tribes, surrounded by nudity of all forms,
suffer no ill effects. Neither do children who grow up in other societies which
are more open about nudity than our own. Presumptions that exposure to nudity
will lead to problems for children grow out of the preconceptions of our
culture.
Paul
Ableman writes: "It is interesting to speculate as to what kind of model of
the human mind Sigmund Freud would have constructed if he had based it not on
clothed Europeans but on, say, a study of the naked Nuer of the Sudan. Almost
all the processes which he discerns as formative for the adult mind would have
been lacking. Freud assumes that children will not normally see each other naked
and that, if they do happen to, the result will be traumatic. This is not true
of naked cultures. . . . Thus great provinces of Freud's mind-empire
would simply be missing. There would be no Oedipus complex (or not much,
anyway), no penis envy or castration complex, probably no clear-cut phases of
sexual development. We are emerging rapidly from the era of Freudian gospel . . .
and can now perceive the extent to which he himself was the victim of prevailing
ideas and prejudices."
75.
Children who grow up in a nudist environment witness the natural body changes
brought on by adolescence, pregnancy, and aging. They have far less anxiety
about these natural processes than children who are never exposed to them except
through layers of clothing.
76.
Research has demonstrated that countries with fewer reservations about nudity
(and sexuality in general) also have lower teen pregnancy and abortion rates.
A
1985 study by the Guttmacher Institute found rates of pregnancy and abortion
among teenage girls in America to be more than twice those of Canada, France,
Sweden, England, and The Netherlands. The disparity couldn't be explained by
differences in sexual activity, race, welfare policies, or the availability of
abortion, but only in cultural attitudes toward nudity and sexuality. The study
found American youth to be particularly ignorant of biology and sexuality,
partly due to a climate of moral disapproval for seeking such knowledge. It
found that lower levels of unwanted pregnancy correlated with factors such as
the amount of female nudity presented by public media and the extent of nudity
on public beaches.
77.
Clothes-compulsion intimidates millions of mothers from breast-feeding their
children, even though breast-feeding is healthier and often more convenient for
both the child and the mother.
In
the U.S., barely half of all mothers breast-feed; only 20% do so for a full 6
months, and only 6% for the Surgeon General's recommended 12 months.
Breast-feeding is also declining in developing countries.
Gabrielle
Palmer writes: "In Victorian England, famous for its prudery, a respectable
woman could feed openly in church, yet in contemporary industrialized society
where women's bodies and particularly breasts are used to sell newspapers, cars
and peanuts, public breast-feeding provokes cries of protest from both men and
women." Lisa Demauro notes that "our society is far more at home
with the idea of sexy breasts than functional ones." "Millions
of boys and girls have grown up never having seen a mother breast-feeding her
baby," adds Marsha Pearlman, the Florida Health Department coordinator for
breast-feeding. "This is a sad commentary on our culture."
Naturism is especially consistent with feminism and the struggle for women's freedom
78.
The repression of healthy nudity, especially for females, has been one of the
chief means of mind and destiny control by the patriarchy. Breaking this pattern
shatters the invisible bonds of an inherited sex role.
79.
Limitations on women's nudity, an acceptance of pornography, and demanding
fashion requirements may, individually, seem like minor issues. Taken as a
whole, however, they form a pattern of repressive male-oriented expectations.
Marilyn
Frye explains: "Consider a birdcage. If you look very closely at just one
wire in the cage, you cannot see the other wires. If your conception of what is
before you is determined by this myopic focus, you could look at that one wire,
up and down the length of it, and be unable to see why a bird would not just fly
around the wire any time it wanted to go somewhere. . . . There is no
physical property of any one wire, nothing that the closest scrutiny could
rediscover, that will reveal how a bird could be inhibited or harmed by it
except in the most accidental way. It is only when you step back, stop looking
at the wires one by one, microscopically, and take a macroscopic view of the
whole cage, that you can see why the bird does not go anywhere; and then you
will see it in a moment. It will require no great subtlety of mental powers. It
is perfectly obvious that the bird is surrounded by a network of systematically
related barriers, no one of which would be the least hindrance to its flight,
but which, by their relations to each other, are as confining as the solid walls
of a dungeon."
80.
Topfree inequality (requiring women, but not men, to wear tops) is demeaning and
discriminatory toward women, and reinforces patterns of male domination over
women.
In
our culture, breasts may be exposed to sell drinks to men in bars, but women may
not be topfree on a beach for their own comfort and pleasure. Reena Glazer
writes: "The criminalization of women baring their breasts, therefore,
indicates that society views women's bodies as immoral and something to hide.
There is something potentially criminal about every woman just by virtue of
being female."
Herald
Price Fahringer writes, "men have the right to cover or expose their chests
as they see fit-women do not. Men have the right to enjoy the sun, water, and
wind without a top; women do not. Few men would be willing to give up this
right. Then why shouldn't women enjoy the same advantage? . . .
Requiring women to cover their breasts in public is a highly visible expression
of inequality between men and women that promotes an attitude that demeans women
and damages their sense of equality. . . . For centuries, men have
held the power to generate these misconceptions. The male view on the exposure
of a woman's breasts is crucially influenced by the need of men to define women.
. . . This reaction stems from a masculine ideology that has . . .
doomed generations of women to a secondary status."
Raymond
Grueneich writes: "So what is really at stake is whether women will be free
to bare their own breasts in appropriate public places for their own personal
purposes on these occasions in which they feel free to do so, or whether they
will only be allowed to bare their breasts in public on an occasion that can be
exploited commercially and that reinforces the idea that the sole function of
the female breast is for the satisfaction of male fantasy. It is as though it is
a crime for a woman to be undressed in public, unless she was undressed in the
service of a corporation or a commercial entrepreneur."
81.
Laws banning exposure of female breasts do so in part because of the reaction
such exposure would supposedly cause in men. Such laws are written entirely from
the male point of view, and ignore the point of view of women, who may want to
go topfree for their own comfort.
82.
By refusing to accept the need to "protect" themselves from men by
covering their bodies, women gain power, and shift the burden of responsible
behavior to men, where it rightfully belongs.
Reena
Glazer notes that "male power is perpetuated by regarding women as objects
that men act and react to rather than as actors themselves. . . .
their entire worth is derived from the reaction they can induce from men. In
order to maintain the patriarchal system, men must determine when and where this
arousal is allowed to take place. In this way, the (heterosexual) male myth of a
woman's breasts has been codified into law. Because women are the sexual objects
and property of men, it follows that what might arouse men can only be displayed
when men want to be aroused." This emphasis on women as temptresses
"shifts the burden of responsibility from men to women; because women
provoke uncontrollable urges in males, society excuses male behavior and blames
the victim for whatever happens. . . . To sanction the concept that
men have uncontrollable urges implies that violence against women is
inevitable."
83.
Patriarchal laws strip women of the right to control their own bodies, but there
have always been "exceptions" to obscenity laws which permit the use
of women's bodies in consumer seduction. Thus female nudity is considered
inappropriate on the beach, but is ubiquitous in advertising and pornography.
84.
By enforcing arbitrary clothing requirements for women (requiring them to cover
their tops), the government acts in loco parentis, in the role of a
parent. This is demeaning to women. Like children, they aren't conceded the
ability or right to decide how to dress, much as they formerly weren't allowed
to vote, own property, or exercise other rights.
85.
The repression of healthy female nudity fuels pornography.
Herbert
Muschamp observes: "To object to the nude figure in a general interest
magazine while allowing it to remain in men's skin magazines is one way of
keeping women in their place."
86.
Pornography, in turn, limits women's ability to participate in healthy nude
recreation, and to be casually nude in other ways. Naturism breaks the power of
pornography over women.
As
mentioned earlier, in many places it is legal to display Penthouse on drug-store
magazine racks, yet it is illegal for a woman to publicly bare her breasts to
feed an infant.
Pornography
seeks "freedom," particularly "freedom of expression." But
an acceptance of pornography restricts women's capacity to go topfree or nude
for their own enjoyment. It limits the freedom to control their own bodies, and
silences their own freedom of self-expression. Our pornographic culture has
contributed to attitudes which often discourage women from even trying
clothing-optional recreation, even though Naturism is in many ways the
antithesis of pornography.
87.
The fight for freedom should mean civil rights for women-not license for
pornographers.
88.
Clothing fashions and legal requirements have historically contributed to the
repression of women.
For
example, in the mid-nineteenth century, a tiny waist was considered a sign of
beauty, and, in order to achieve this standard, women bound themselves into
corsets designed to constrict the stomach (and other internal organs) inward and
upward, creating the appearance of a tiny middle. In addition, women wore up to
fifteen layers of petticoats and crinolines under their floor-length skirts. In
the latter half of the century the wire hoop and spring-like bustle were also
added for the appearance of fullness. The weight of this assemblage came close
to 20 pounds. We now know that many of the physical characteristics associated
with the "frail sex" resulted from such restrictive clothing,
including "bird-like" appetites, a tendency to fainting spells, and
reduced physical activity. Thorstein Veblen has observed that "the corset
is in economic theory substantially [an instrument of] mutilation for the
purpose of lowering the subject's vitality and rendering her personally and
obviously unfit for work." A variety of respiratory and reproductive
ailments (including frequent miscarriages) from which women once suffered have
been directly linked to the unhealthy dictates of the "hourglass"
fashion. Many of the associations of female frailty which have their roots in
the nineteenth century remain with us today, though they are now
unsubstantiated.
Corsets
and, in modern times, cosmetic breast surgery also damage the internal
physiology of the breasts, often eliminating the capacity to breast-feed.
89.
Naturism defies relationships based on a balance of power, and is thus
consistent with contemporary feminism, which seeks to break down power
hierarchies.
Naturism is more natural than clothes - compulsiveness
90.
Naturism, as a celebration of the natural human body free of the artificiality
of fashion, is highly compatible with the ideals of a natural, simple, and
environmentally friendly lifestyle.
91.
As we work for the good of nature, we must also work for the good and the
freedom of our bodies, especially as they may be integrated with the rest of
nature.
As
the Quebec Naturist Federation has observed, "Nature is not just the trees;
it is also our bodies."
92.
The goals of Naturism and environmentalism are often parallel. Like
environmentalism, Naturism usually seeks to preserve the natural character of
landscapes, and opposes development and commercial exploitation. The greatest
risk to most beaches is not nudity, but development-the takeover of pristine
public areas by private resorts or hotels.
93.
One feels much more a part of a natural setting in the nude than clothed.
94.
The nudist is far more sensually aware, because nudity enhances responsiveness
and sensory experience.
95.
Clothing cuts us off from the natural world, by inhibiting the skin's ability to
sense the environment. It in fact distracts from our ability to sense the
natural environment, by artificially irritating the skin.
Paul
Ableman writes, "if primitives lost their culture [through being clothed by
missionaries], they also lost their environment. They lost the sun, the rain,
the grass underfoot, the foliage which brushed their skin as they moved through
forest or jungle, the water of lake, river or sea slipping past their bodies,
above all the ceaseless communion with the wind. Anyone who has ever spent any
time naked outdoors knows that the play of the elements over the body produces
an ever-changing response that may reach almost erotic intensity. The skin
becomes alive and responsive and a whole new spectrum of sensation is generated.
Clothe the body and this rich communion is replaced by mere fortuitous, and
often irritating, contact with inert fabric. It is a huge impoverishment and its
measure can perhaps best be judged by the reluctance of the Indians of Tierra
del Fuego, who live in a climate so harsh that Darwin observed snow melting on
the naked breasts of women, to adopt protective clothing. They preferred dermal
contact with the environment, hostile though it was, to the loss of sensation
implied by wearing clothes."
96.
Clothes-compulsiveness is incompatible with the natural patterns of nature, as
expressed by every other member of the animal kingdom. Humans are the only
species to clothe themselves.
97.
Some psychologists theorize that humans developed clothing, in part, to set
themselves apart from animals.
Fred
Ilfeld and Roger Lauer write: "Man's major goal is superiority . . .
and one way that he strives for it is through clothing. Not only do clothes
protect and decorate, but they also give status to the wearer, not just with
respect to peers but, more importantly, in relation to man's place in nature.
Clothes make a human being appear less like an animal and more like a god by
concealing his sexual organs." Lawrence Langner adds: "Modern
man is a puritan and not a pagan, and by his clothing has been able to overcome
his feeling of shame in relation to his sex organs in public, in mixed company.
He has done this by transforming his basic inferiority into a feeling of
superiority, by relating himself to God in whose sexless image he claims to be
made. But take all his clothes off, and it is plain to see that he is half-god,
half-animal. He is playing two opposing roles which contradict one another, and
the result is confusion."
98.
The physical barrier of clothing reinforces psychological barriers separating us
from the natural world.
In
our clothing-obsessed society, we have distanced ourselves so much from nature
that the sight of our own natural state is often startling. Allen Ginsberg
writes: "Truth may always surprise a little, because we are creatures of
habit, especially in our hypermechanized, hyperindustrialized, hypermilitarized
society. Any presentation of nature tends to appear shocking."
99.
Lifestyles which are incompatible with the natural patterns of nature (including
clothes-obsessiveness) may be psychological damaging.
Robert
Bahr writes: "Nakedness is the natural state of humankind; clothing imposes
a barrier between us and God, nature, the universe, which serves to dehumanize
us all." "Paradoxically," muses Jeremy Seabrook, "the
very presence of the westerners [on nude beaches] in the south is an expression
of some absence in their everyday lives. After all, whole industries are now
devoted to enabling people 'to get away from it all.' What is it, precisely,
they want to get away from, when the iconography of their culture is promoted
globally as the provider of everything? Many will admit they are looking for
something not available at home (apart from sunshine), something to do with
authenticity, a state of being 'unspoilt'. . . . They have been
stripped of their cultural heritage; and this is why they have to buy back what
ought to be the birthright of all human beings: secure anchorage in celebrations
and rituals that attend the significant moments of our human lives."
100.
A Naturist lifestyle is more environmentally responsible. For example, the
option of going nude during hot, humid weather greatly reduces the need for air
conditioning. Most air conditioners use tremendous amounts of energy, and many
use coolants which are damaging to the stratospheric ozone layer.
101.
Clothing is produced by environmentally irresponsible processes from
environmentally irresponsible sources.
For
instance, synthetics are developed from oil; and cotton is grown with intensive
pesticide-loaded agricultural techniques. Cotton constitutes half of the world's
textile consumption, and is one of the most pesticide-sprayed crops in the
world. Clothing manufacture may also include chlorine bleaching, chemical
dyeing, sealing with metallic compounds, finishing with resins and formaldehyde,
and electroplating to rust-proof zippers, creating toxic residues in waste
water.
Accepted clothing requirements are arbitrary and inconsistent
102.
Clothing standards are inconsistent.
For
instance, a bikini covering is accepted and even lauded on the beach, but is
restricted elsewhere-in a department store, for example. Even on the beach, an
expensive bikini is considered acceptable, whereas underwear-though it covers
the same amount-is not.
103.
Clothing requirements are arbitrarily and irrationally based on gender.
Until
the 1920s, for example, female ankles and shins were considered erotic in
Western cultures, though men wore knickers. The Japanese considered the back of
a woman's neck erotic, and contemporary Middle Eastern cultures hide the woman's
face. During the 1991 Gulf War, female U.S. army personnel were forbidden from
wearing t-shirts that bared their arms, since it would offend the Saudi Arabian
allies. Women (but not men) were forced to wear full army dress in stifling
heat.
104.
Today in America, women's breasts are seen as erotic and unexposable, even
though they are anatomically identical to those of men except for lactation
capacity, and no more or less a sexual organ.
Medical
experts note that men's breasts have the same erotic capacities as women's. In
addition, studies suggest that women are as sexually attracted by men's
unclothed chests as men are by women's.
105.
The arbitrary nature of clothing requirements is reflected by different
standards in different cultures.
For
example, a review of 190 world societies in 1951 found that, contrary to the
standards of our own culture, relatively few considered exposure of a women's
breasts to be immodest. Julian Robinson observes, "few cultural groups
agree as to which parts of our bodies should be covered and which parts should
be openly displayed. . . . Indeed, many people find it difficult to
comprehend the logic behind any other mode of clothing and adornment than what
they are currently wearing, finding them all unnatural or even uncivilized. The
thought of exposing or viewing those parts of the body which they generally keep
covered so frightens or disgusts them that they call upon their lawmakers to
protect them from such a possibility."
106.
The arbitrary nature of clothing requirements is reflected by history. Even in
the same culture, taboos about what parts of the body could or could not be
revealed have changed radically over time.
For
example, until statutes were amended in the 1930s, men were arrested in the
United States for swimming without a shirt. Many of the paintings and sculptures
today considered "classic"-for example, Michelangelo's Last
Judgment-were considered obscene in their day. The body taboo reached its
height in mid 19th-century England and America, when it was considered improper
to mention almost any detail of the human body in mixed company. Howard Warren
writes: "A woman was allowed to have head and feet, but between the neck
and ankles only the heart and stomach were permitted mention in polite society.
To expose the ankle (even though properly stockinged) was considered
immodest." On the other hand, in the early part of the 19th century,
women's clothing fashions in France were so scant that an entire costume,
including shoes, may not have weighed more than eight ounces. Lois M. Gurel
writes: "One must remember that clothing itself is neither moral nor
immoral. It is the breaking of traditions which makes it so."
The
degree to which women's breasts may be exposed has varied especially in Western
cultures. At various times in history, women's necklines have plunged so deeply
that the breasts have been more exposed than covered. Historian Aileen Ribeiro
notes that in the early 15th century, "women's gowns became increasingly
tight-fitted over the bust, some gowns with front openings even revealing the
nipples." Breasts came back on display throughout the early 17th century,
and again in the 18th century, especially in the Court of King Charles II of
England. Ironically, in this latter period, a respectable woman would never be
found in public with the point of her shoulders revealed.
Is growing in acceptance
107.
Most world societies are much more open about nudity than the United States. For
example, many cultures, especially in Europe, are more open to nudity on beaches
and in other recreational settings.
A
1995 poll conducted by a French fashion magazine found that only 7% of the
population was shocked by the sight of naked breasts on the beach, and that 40%
of women had tried going top free. A 1983 poll found that 27% of French women
went top free on the beach on a regular basis, while another 6% went nude. A
1982 Harris poll found that 86% of French citizens favor nudity on public
beaches. In Munich and Zurich, topfree and nude sunbathing are permitted in many
parks. A Zurich municipal ordinance in 1989 officially accepted nudity in
municipal pools after a public opinion poll found only 18% opposition. Two
separate polls conducted in the mid-1980s found that 68% of Germans did not
object to nude bathing. A 1983 public opinion survey in Greece found that 65% of
the population favored legislative establishment of four official nudist
facilities. A 1984 poll found that 82% of a cross section of Lisbon residents
approved of nude beaches reserved for that purpose. In Denmark, judicious nudity
is legal on the seashore except on a few specifically clothed beaches! Sweden's
coastline is nearly as tolerant as Denmark's. Beach nudity has also become the
norm in inflation-stricken Romania, where the average monthly wage is about $65
and a swimsuit costs from $4 to $20. Saunas are ubiquitous in Finland, with a
sauna for every 3.5 inhabitants, and are always used nude, commonly in mixed
company.
108.
Participation in nudist organizations is high in other parts of the world.
In
Holland, 1 in 422 members of the population is a dues-paying nudist. In
Switzerland, the number is 1 in 519; in France, 1 in 630; in Belgium, 1 in 890;
in New Zealand, 1 in 1250; in the U.K., 1 in 2784; in English-speaking Canada, 1
in 5200; and in the U.S., 1 in 6856. According to a French survey, one in ten
members of the nation's population have tried nudism at least once, and an equal
number are ready to give it a try.
109.
Naturist vacations are a significant part of the tourist trade in many
countries.
As
of 1983, about 2 million people vacationed at French Naturist clubs and resorts
each year. Before its devastating fragmentation and civil war, more than one
hundred thousand tourists visited Yugoslavian nudist camps and resorts every
summer. According to the president of the Naturism and Camping Department of
Yugoslav Tourism, Naturist vacations in 1984 accounted for 25% of the foreign
tourism income. And while American travel brochures make almost no mention at
all of nude or top free beaches in other countries-essentially lying to
vacationers-foreign travel agencies offer opulent, uncensored brochures, and
openly advertise and promote Naturist resorts.
110.
Nudity is much more common in foreign media.
For
example, one of Brazil's most popular TV. shows, "Pantanal," has
featured frequent nudity; a survey conducted by the local newspaper found that
83% of viewers were "comfortable" with the nude scenes. A University
of Sao Paulo survey in June 1990 counted 1,145 displays of nudity in one week of
television.
111.
Public nudity, including clothing-optional recreation, enjoys growing acceptance
in North America.
A
1983 Gallup poll revealed that 72% of Americans don't think designated
clothing-optional beaches should be against the law, and 39% agreed that such
areas should be set aside by the government. One third said they might try going
to one. Fourteen percent said they'd already tried coed nude recreation. A 1985
Roper Poll agreed, reporting that 18% of all Americans-including 27% of those
age 18-28, and 24% of college-educated Americans-had already gone swimming in
the nude with a group that included members of the other sex; other studies
suggest these numbers are on the increase. A Psychology Today study found
that 28% of couples under the age of 35 swim in the nude together, 24% of
couples age 35-49, and 9% of couples 50 or older, and that such activities
tended to correspond to a higher level of satisfaction in the marriage. A 1990
Martini and Rossi poll reported that 35% of Americans would "bare it
all" on a nude beach. A 1986 poll conducted by People Weekly asked
people how guilty they would feel if they engaged in any of 51 activities,
rating their probable guilt on a scale of 1 to 10, where 10 represented the
greatest feeling of guilt. Nude sunbathing came in second to last with a
rating of 2.76, behind not voting (3.07), swearing (3.34), smoking (3.38), and
overeating (4.43).
In
1991, visitation at Wreck Beach, British Columbia on a nice day was estimated at
15,000, and 90,000 beach users were recorded in one month on a single access
trail. A survey conducted by West Area Park Staff revealed that half of those
visitors go nude. When that option was threatened in 1991, more than 10,000
people sent letters or signed petitions to protect the beach's clothing-optional
status.
Given
the opportunity and license to do so, women do take advantage of the option of
going top free. During the 1984 Olympics in L.A., Police decided not to arrest
European women who went top free on local beaches. American women, noting the
double standard, took their tops off too, and feigned inability to understand
English when told to cover up. Police called it "taking advantage of the
relaxed rule," though it should more accurately be considered
"taking advantage of a more civilized custom."
112.
Membership in nudist organizations is growing rapidly.
Membership
in the American Association for Nude Recreation, for example, topped 40,000 in
1992, up 15,000 in just five years! By 1995, the number had climbed past 46,000.
According to a study commissioned by the Trade Association for Nude Recreation,
participation in nudism is currently growing by about 20% per year.
113.
The tourism industry is discovering that it is in their economic best interests
to accept clothing-optional recreation.
When
it became a favorite vacation spot for Europeans in the mid-1980s, Miami Beach
began permitting G-string swimsuits on its beaches, and ceased enforcing its
ordinance against top free swimming and sunning. Dade County is the only county
in Florida that experienced an increase of tourism in 1991, a year of deep
recession. All other counties, and Disney World, had significant losses in
tourism. Nikki Grossman, director of the Ft. Lauderdale Convention and Visitors'
Bureau, acknowledges that "requests for nude or top-free beaches rank among
the top five priorities of international conventioneers," and Fodor's
Travel Guide has observed that "nudism" is "tourism's fastest
growing sector." Nudism, in the United States, brings in about $120
million per year in direct revenues alone.
Constitutional support for Naturism
114.
In a free society such as the United States, one's lifestyle should not be
dictated by anyone else (majority or otherwise), especially if that lifestyle
does not infringe on anyone else's rights.
In
the words of Justice Sandra Day O'Connor: "Our Constitution is designed to
maximize individual freedom within a framework of ordered liberty."
115.
The Constitution was, in fact, written to protect the rights of minority points
of view. This principle alone should justify the right to recreate peacefully in
the nude without government interference.
Justice
William O. Douglas, for a unanimous court in 1972, wrote: "These amenities
have dignified the right of dissent and have honored the right to be
nonconformists and the right to defy submissiveness. They have encouraged lives
of high spirits rather than hushed, suffocating silence."
116.
The Constitution has been interpreted to protect individual freedoms except
where they are overridden by a "compelling state interest." It is
never the responsibility of individuals to justify their freedoms. It is rather
the responsibility of government to justify any restriction of freedom.
Justice
Douglas enumerated three levels of rights: "First is the autonomous control
over the development and expression of one's intellect, interests, tastes, and
personality. Second is freedom of choice in the basic decisions of one's life
respecting marriage, divorce, procreation, contraception, and the education and
upbringing of children. Third is the freedom to care for one's health and
person, freedom from bodily restraint or compulsion, freedom to walk, stroll, or
loaf." Douglas would permit no state restriction of the first level
of freedom; only narrow restrictions on the second; and in the third,
"regulation on a showing of 'compelling state interest.'"
117.
Naturism has always claimed that nudity offers "freedom from bodily
restraints." Such freedoms may only be restricted in the case of
"compelling state interest;" if none can be shown, the restriction is
invalid.
Unfortunately,
though the courts have "recognized as a protectable, if minor interest . . .
an individual right concerning one's own appearance and lifestyle,"
especially where supported by tradition and custom, in the case of public nudity
such protection is not "fundamental" or directly
"constitutional" and thus can be overruled or limited by other
considerations, such as environmental concerns or "community
standards." Often the reference is to moral principles. These can
usually be shown to be "overbroad" by constitutional standards,
because they prohibit innocent behavior (such as skinny-dipping) along with
behavior of legitimate government concern (such as lewd conduct).
118.
The Constitution has repeatedly been interpreted to protect the right of
individuals to associate with others of similar philosophy, and also to raise
their children in the context of a particular philosophy. This principle
protects the right of nudist families to associate and recreate in the nude.
119.
The First Amendment guarantees the right to freedom of expression. This protects
every other form of clothing, and should protect the right not to wear
clothing as well.
120.
Recent court decisions in Florida, New York, and elsewhere have upheld nudity as
part of the expression of free speech.
Unfortunately,
the courts have consistently concluded that mere nudity per se (for
example, nude sunbathing on a public beach), without being combined with some
other protected form of expression, is not protected as free speech under
the first amendment. The courts have distinguished between protected First
Amendment beliefs and actual conduct based on those beliefs, arguing that
going nude on a beach is "conduct" rather than merely the natural
state of a human being.
121.
The "body language" of the nude human form has extraordinary symbolic
and communicative power which should be protected by the First Amendment.
Examples
may be seen in painting, photography, sculpture, drama, cinema, and other visual
forms of communication throughout history.
122.
The Supreme Court has ruled that people can't be forced to communicate ideas
they oppose (for example, saying the Pledge of Allegiance). It has also ruled
that clothes can be a protected form of free speech (for instance, students and
public employees had the right to wear black armbands to protest the Vietnam
War). It is unconstitutional to force Naturists to express conformity to ideas
of modesty and body shame that they disagree with, by forcing them to wear
swimsuits at the beach.
As
attorney Eleanor Fink says, "If people are allowed to wear the clothes of
[Nazis], should they not also be allowed to wear the clothing of the
Creator?"
123.
The courts have thus far permitted the publishers of pornography to express
attitudes which are exploitative of women, on the grounds that this is protected
free speech; but it has been unsuitably reluctant to grant the same protection
to the natural expression of body freedom through casual, non-exploitative
nudity on the beach.
124.
Clothing is both publicly expressive and privately symbolic, connoting identity
in a particular cultural group. Restricting the state of dress of nudists is no
less restrictive than prohibiting any other cultural group from wearing the
clothing particular to their group. Preventing nudists from going nude is
equivalent to preventing a person of Scottish descent from wearing the family
colors, or preventing a priest from wearing his robes.
125.
With the emergence of national organizations promoting nudism as a doctrine,
nude recreation may eventually come to be seen as a protected medium of speech
expressing that doctrine, and as an example of protected free association.
126.
The Ninth Amendment makes it clear that no freedoms shall be denied that are not
specifically prohibited. Thus, mere nudity is not illegal except where there are
specific laws that prohibit it.
Most
laws prohibit only lewd conduct, not nudity per se; and there is in fact no
universal legal prohibition against nudity on public land.
127.
Many prohibitions against nudity stem, historically, from the political climate
of the early Christian church. Even today, much of the objection to nudism is
based on religious principles. The constitutional separation of church and state
should make this an invalid argument.
128.
Extensive legal precedent suggests that laws requiring women, but not men, to
conceal their breasts are sexist, discriminatory, and unconstitutional.
For
example, in 1992, the New York Court of Appeals, the state's highest court,
unanimously overturned the conviction of two women found guilty of exposing
their breasts in public. The ruling held that the state's anti-nudity law was
intended to apply only to lewd and lascivious behavior, not to
"non-commercial, perhaps accidental, and certainly not lewd,
exposure." Herald Price Fahringer, the women's lawyer, said that the ruling
meant that women in New York State could sunbathe top free or even walk down the
street without a top, as long as this was not done in a lewd manner, or for such
purposes as prostitution. Judge Vito Titone pointed out that women sunbathe top
free in many European countries, adding: "To the extent that many in our
society may regard the uncovered female breast with a prurient interest that is
not similarly aroused by the male equivalent, that perception cannot serve as a
justification for different treatment because it is itself a suspect cultural
artifact rooted in centuries of prejudice and bias toward women."
This ruling, however, is just one of many statutes and legal precedents
nationwide that uphold the position that breast exposure is not inherently
indecent behavior.
Additional legal support for Naturism
129.
Case history demonstrates that laws requiring women to cover their breasts are
not justified by cultural prejudices and preconceptions.
130.
Laws requiring women, but not men, to cover their breasts are written entirely
from a male perspective, assuming that men's bodies are natural and normal, and
that women's bodies must be covered because they are different.
Reena
Glazer observes that "under sameness theory, women can get equal treatment
only to the extent that they are the same as men." Physical differences
among the races do not justify discrimination, and neither should physical
differences between the sexes.
131.
Laws requiring women to cover their breasts are not justified by claims that
women's bodies are significantly different from men's; nor by inaccurate claims
that breasts are sex organs; nor by the fact that breasts may play a role in sex
or sex play; nor by the fact that breasts are prominent secondary sex
characteristics.
It
can't be argued that women have breasts and men don't, because both do; nor can
it be argued that women have larger, often protruding breasts, because
many women are flat-chested while many men have large breasts. Breasts are not
sex organs, for they are not essential to reproduction, and in fact have nothing
to do with it. A woman with no breasts can have a baby. Breasts serve the
physiological function of nourishing a baby-but this is a maternal function,
not a sexual one. Breasts may play a role in sex play, but other body parts do
too, and are not censured--particularly the hands, and the mouth (which,
incidentally, is veiled by Shi'ite Moslems, partly for that very reason,
though only on women). And while breasts are secondary sex characteristics, so
are beards, which are not restricted on men.
132.
Mere nudity is not in itself lewd or "indecent exposure," a
distinction upheld by extensive legal precedent nationwide.
133.
Mere nudity cannot be offensive or immoral "conduct"--for it is not
conduct at all, but merely the natural state of a human being.
It
should be no less legitimate to be in this natural human state than to be
clothed. One's ethnicity is also a natural state of being, and discrimination on
this basis is illegal. It should be equally illegal to discriminate on the basis
of appearing in the natural state common to all humanity.
134.
Given the challenge of defining modesty standards, which are by nature
ambiguous, legislators have often found it to be more complicated to prohibit
nudity than to sanction it.
For
example, in the local anti-nudity legislation of St. John's County, Florida, we
find this painstakingly elaborate definition of "buttocks:" "The
area at the rear of the human body (sometimes referred to as the gluteus maximus)
which lies between two imaginary straight lines running parallel to the ground
when a person is standing, the first or top such line being a half-inch below
the top of the vertical cleavage of the nates (i.e., the prominence formed by
the muscles running from the back of the hip to the back of the leg) and the
second or bottom such line being a half-inch above the lowest point of the
curvature of the fleshy protuberance (sometimes referred to as the gluteal
fold), and between two imaginary straight lines, one on each side of the body
(the 'outside lines'), which outside lines are perpendicular to the ground and
to the horizontal lines described above, and which perpendicular outside lines
pass through the outermost point(s) at which each nate meets the outer side of
each leg. Notwithstanding the above, buttocks shall not include the leg, the
hamstring muscle below the gluteal fold, the tensor fasciae latae muscles, or
any of the above described portion of the human body that is between either (i)
the left inside perpendicular line and the left outside perpendicular line or
(ii) the right inside perpendicular line and the right outside perpendicular
line. For the purpose of the previous sentence, the left inside perpendicular
line shall be an imaginary straight line on the left side of the anus (i) that
is perpendicular to the ground and to the horizontal lines described above and
(ii) that is one third of the distance from the anus to the left outside line.
(The above description can generally be described as covering one third
of the buttocks centered over the cleavage for the length of the
cleavage.)"
135.
A large portion of state and local government anti-nudity regulations have been
legislated by individual high officials or small groups, without public review.
This is undemocratic and contrary to the principle of due process.
Florida,
for example, closed most of its nude beaches in 1983 without public review.
136.
By extensive legal precedent, it is unquestionably legal to be nude in private,
on private property.
137.
Many state or local governments have also explicitly legislated the right to be
nude in designated public areas, such as legally-sanctioned nude beaches.
Legal
nude beaches are rare but not non-existent in North America. British Columbia,
for example, currently has one legally sanctioned nude beach, and Oregon has
two.
138.
There is no universal federal prohibition against nudity on public land. In
general, public land agencies view nude recreation-conducted with discretion
and sensitivity to the varying values of others-as "legitimate
activity."
Many
state and local governments (notably Oregon, Vermont, and the California
Department of Recreation and Parks) have followed the federal policy as well,
without conflict.
William
Penn Mott, a former Director of the National Park Service, wrote: "NPS must
consciously seek to respect and accommodate wide ranging differences among
visitors and professional colleagues in lifestyles and values with sympathy,
dignity, and tolerance. I believe that parks are a place where the human spirit
is more free, more capable of permitting people to be themselves, closer to a
oneness with universal truths about humankind and about our relationship to
nature and the sacred truths by which we live. . . . I believe it is
too easy for government employees-all of us-to think there is only one way
to enjoy and use the parks and that when the visitor enters 'our parks' they
must 'do it our way.'"
139.
The nude use of most federal lands is, in fact, constitutional because
there is no universal federal law prohibiting it. The Ninth Amendment
specifically says that no freedoms shall be denied which are not specifically
prohibited.
140.
The mandate of public land agencies such as the U.S. Forest Service provide for
diversity of recreation. Historically, provisions have been made even for
extreme minority forms of recreation. Recreational diversity ought to also
include provisions for nude recreation.
A
1983 Gallup poll found that 14% of Americans occasionally enjoyed nude
recreation. How many activities does 14% of the American public participate in,
of any kind? Surely not hunting, snowmobiling, mountain biking, or the
use of off-road vehicles, all of which have designated areas set aside for their
use!
141.
Clothing-optional recreation is less offensive to most people than many other
forms of recreation which are openly tolerated and even promoted on public land.
A
study by Dr. Steven D. Moore of the University of Arizona demonstrated that
encountering nude bathers on public land is five times more acceptable to the
public than encountering hunters.
142.
Naturists certainly deserve at least as much consideration by land management
agencies as resource-damaging activities such as off-road vehicle use.
As
Pat O'Brien points out, "avoiding nude people in places where they're
expected to be is easy. That isn't true when it comes to other sanctioned uses
of our public lands and waterways. The roar and stink of a snowmobile or other
off-road vehicles can't be ignored, and you'd best not overlook a jet skier in
the water near you. Why then is it so objectionable for us to ask to use a small
amount of space on a non-exclusive basis, in ways that do not pollute and do not
drive others away?"
143.
The Wilderness Act of 1963 defined wilderness areas as "lands designated
for preservation and protection in their natural condition." They are to be
managed in a manner that maintains them in as natural a state as possible. It
follows that human should be able to enjoy wilderness areas in their own most
natural state, free from the artificial constraints of clothing.
144.
Public wilderness areas ought to be places where human freedoms, including nude
recreation, are observed more freely than anywhere else. Wilderness should be
our measure of carefully controlled anarchy, our refuge free of any but the most
necessary intrusions by government rules and regulations. Do we not go to
wilderness for these very reasons, and would it not be compromised by undue
outside interference, such as unnecessary clothing regulations?
145.
Recreation managers unfortunately often "solve" the issue of nude
recreation, not by managing it, but by ignoring it.
Thus
managers "permit" nudity on remote beaches without facilities or
lifeguards, then point to litter, drug use, and other problems as a consequence
of the nudity rather than the lack of active management.
146.
If public nude recreation can be widely accepted in societies considered
repressive by Americans (for example, formerly-socialist Yugoslavia,
once-communist East Germany, Orthodox Greece, or Catholic France), it ought to
be tolerated in democratic Europe and in America, "the land of the
free."
Lee
Baxandall has reported that "almost every town [on East Germany's coast]
has an FKK [nude] beach, some 90 sites serving 200,000 campers/lodgers annually;
more FKK than textile beaches. A GDR poll found 57% of the population approving
of nude recreation, 30% had no opinion, and only 13% opposed."
Unfortunately, with the reunification of Germany, the West has exported to the
East both pornography and beach restrictions: now that East Germany is
"free," many of its beaches aren't. A June 1992 UPI dispatch from
Ahlbeck noted that "the controversy stems from the introduction of western
German-style regulations on traditionally nude eastern German beaches."
Ironically, authority for the new prohibitions of nudity stems from a Nazi-era
regulation carrying the signature of Heinrich Himmler.
147.
Anti-nudity laws are demeaning because they replace individual responsibility
with state control.
148.
It is inappropriate to use police resources to crack down on peaceful bathers at
a beach simply because they are nude, while taking valuable resources away from
other more urgent needs.
149.
It is a cruel reversal of justice when the law frowns on innocent
skinny-dippers, while gawkers on the fringe of the nude beach, who pervert and
fetishize the body, are accepted as "normal."
Historical support for Naturism
150.
Social nudity is part of a long historical tradition. Recent Western
civilization stands almost alone, in the entire known history of humanity, in
its repressive code against nudity.
151.
Nudity was commonplace in the ancient Greek civilization, especially for men.
By
the Classical Period of ancient Greece, nude exercise and athletic competition
had become part of the way of life for Greek men, and a practice which separated
"modern" Greeks both from other, "barbarian" cultures and
from their own past. The original Olympic games were conducted in the nude.
Plato described nudity in exercise as a practical, useful, and rational
innovation; Thucydides promoted it as simpler, freer, and more democratic, a
cultural distinction between the Greek soldier who must be in shape, lean and
muscular, not portly and prosperous, and the "barbarians" who
announced their status and wealth by wearing expensive garments that gave a
false impression of elegance and authority.
152.
Old Testament ceremonial washings, including baptism, were performed in the
nude. Christ, too, was probably baptized naked-as depicted in numerous early
works of art.
153.
Roman citizens, including early Christians, bathed communally in the nude at the
public baths throughout most of the second through the fourth centuries. Nudity
was also common during this period in other parts of ancient Roman society.
154.
The writings of early Christians such as Irenaeus and Tertullian make it clear
that they had no ethical reservations about communal nudity.
Christian
historian Roy Bowen Ward notes that "Christian Morality did not originally
preclude nudity. . . . There is a tendency to read history backward
and assume that early Christians thought the same way mainstream Christians do
today. We attribute the present to the past."
155.
For the first several centuries of Christianity, it was the custom to baptize
men, women, and children together nude. This ritual played a very significant
role in the early church. The accounts are numerous and detailed.
Margaret
Miles notes that "naked baptism was observed as one of the two essential
elements in Christian initiation, along with the invocation of the Trinity. . . .
In the fourth century instructions for baptism throughout the Roman Empire
stipulated naked baptism without any suggestion of innovation or change from
earlier practices." A typical historical account comes from Cyril of
Jerusalem, bishop of Jerusalem from A.D. 387 to 417: "Immediately, then,
upon entering, you remove your tunics. . . . You are now stripped and
naked, in this also imitating Christ despoiled of His garments on His Cross, He
Who by His nakedness despoiled the principalities and powers, and fearlessly
triumphed over them on the Cross." After baptism, and clothed in white
albs, St. Cyril would say: "How wonderful! You were naked before the eyes
of all and were not ashamed! Truly you bore the image of the first-formed Adam,
who was naked in the garden and was not ashamed." J.C. Cunningham
notes that "there is nothing in the present rubrics of the Roman rite
against doing this today. In fact, in the Eastern rites the rubrics even state
the option of nude adult baptism."
156.
Nudity was common and accepted in pre-medieval (circa 6th century) society,
especially in places like Great Britain, which had been "barbarian"
lands only a few hundred years before.
E.T.
Renbourn notes that nudity was widespread throughout Ancient Britain and
northern Europe, in spite of the climate. Even as late as the 17th century,
travelers such as Coryat and Fynes Moryson found the Irish people living nude or
semi-nude indoors. He writes that Moryson, in his Itinery (circa early
17th century), found Irish gentlewomen "prepared to receive visitors and
even strangers indoors when completely unencumbered by clothing."
157.
Nudity was fairly common in medieval and renaissance society, especially in the
public baths and within the family setting.
Havelock
Ellis records that "in daily life . . . a considerable degree of
nakedness was tolerated during medieval times. This was notably so in the public
baths, frequented by men and women together." Lawrence Wright
observes that nudity was common in the home, too: "The communal tub had . . .
one good reason; the good reason was the physical difficulty of providing hot
water. No modern householder who . . . has bailed out and carried away
some 30 gallons of water, weighing 300 lb., will underrate the labour involved.
The whole family and their guests would bathe together while the water was hot.
. . . Ideas of propriety were different from ours, the whole household
and the guests shared the one and only sleeping apartment, and wore no
night-clothes until the sixteenth century. It was not necessarily rude to be
nude."
The
high-ranking nobles of Edward IV's court were permitted by law to display their
naked genitals below a short tunic, and contemporary reports indicate that they
did so. Chaucer commented on the use of this fashion in The Parson's Tale,
written about 1400. Many men's garments, he wrote, were so short they "covere
nat the shameful membres of man." Between the 14th and mid-17th
centuries, and especially during the reign of Louis XIV, women would often leave
their bodices loose and open or even entirely undone, exposing the nipple or
even the whole of the breasts, a practice confirmed by numerous historical
accounts. The Venetian ambassador, writing in 1617, described Queen Anne of
Denmark as wearing a dress which displayed her bosom "bare down to the pit
of the stomach." Aileen Ribeiro writes that in the early 15th century,
"women's gowns became increasingly tight-fitting over the bust, some gowns
with front openings even revealing the nipples. . . . In 1445
Guillaume Jouvenal des Ursins became Chancellor of France and his brother, an
ecclesiastic, wrote to him urging him to tell the king that he should not allow
the ladies of his household to wear gowns with front openings that revealed
their breasts and nipples."
158.
Even in the Victorian era, before the invention of bathing suits, swimming nude
in the ocean was commonplace; and music halls often featured nude models as
living "sculpture."
159.
Few people realize that swimsuits, as we know them today, are a relatively
recent concept. The idea of wearing special clothing to swim in is barely a
century old.
160.
Skinny-dipping, in the local river or farm pond, is well-documented as an
important historical part of our national heritage.
Skinny-dipping
and outdoor nudity appear in the writings of Walt Whitman, Mark Twain, William
Allen White, Lincoln Steffens, William Styron, Anne Morrow Lindbergh, Herman
Melville, James Michener, and Henry Miller, among many others, and in the
depictions of Norman Rockwell, Rockwell Kent, Andrew Wyeth, Thomas Eakins, John
Sloane, and Grant Wood.
161.
Many YMCA, college, and high school male-only pools or swimming classes were
historically "swimsuit-optional" or nude-only until
federally-mandated "equal access" athletic programs (for the sake of
women) were instituted in the mid 1970s.
162.
Today, there are still public locations where nudity is, by local tradition or
custom, the accepted practice.
Nudity
is the norm, for instance, in natural primitive hot springs and on nude beaches;
and, almost universally, for models in art classes.
163.
The few officially sanctioned nude beaches in the U.S. (for example, Rooster
Rock State Park, Oregon) and Canada (Wreck Beach, British Columbia)-and most
of the unofficial beaches as well-have existed for decades without
significant problems.
164.
Many highly respected people, historical and contemporary, have espoused and/or
participated in Naturism to some degree.
Benjamin
Franklin took daily naked "air baths." So did Henry David Thoreau,
who was also a frequent skinny-dipper. Alexander Graham Bell was a skinny-dipper
and nude sunbather. George Bernard Shaw, Walt Whitman, Eugene O'Neill, and
painter Thomas Eakins argued in favor of social nudity.
President
John Quincy Adams was a regular skinny-dipper. According to reports, "each
morning he got up before dawn, walked across the White House lawn to the Potomac
River, took off his clothes and swam in the nude. Then he returned to the White
House to have breakfast, read the Bible and run the country."
President Theodore Roosevelt frequently swam nude in Rock Creek Park in
Washington, once skinny-dipping with the French diplomat, Jules Jusserand.
President Lyndon Johnson occasionally swam nude with guests in the white house
pool, including evangelist Billy Graham. Senator Edward Kennedy has been
photographed skinny-dipping at public beaches in Florida. At the White House of
his brother, John F. Kennedy, nudity had been common around the White House
pool. Many U.S. congressmen enjoy nude recreation, albeit segregated: U.S.
Senate members may use the Russell Senate Office Building Pool in the nude (the
few female Senators make appointments to assure there won't be males on hand),
and Representatives may use a clothing-optional steam room, where President Bush
was said by Newsweek to hang out sans towel with his buddies. Congressmen
also sunbathed nude on the Speaker's Porch until one day in 1973 when Rep.
Patricia Schroeder wandered into the gathering inadvertently.
Billionaire
insurance man John D. MacArthur frequently went skinnydipping, and left a beach
to the state of Florida, intending that a portion be designated
clothing-optional (a wish that has been spurned); word has it that MacArthur
went skinny-dipping with Walt Disney at this beach in the late 1960s. World Bank
president and former U.S. Defense Secretary Robert McNamara, and American Civil
Liberties Union founder Roger Baldwin, both have been regular skinnydippers.
Charles F. Richter, the co-inventor of the earthquake measuring system, was a
life-long nudist and Naturist. Actress Lynn Redgrave and her family practice
social nudism. Actresses Bridget Fonda and Brigitte Bardot enjoy social nudity.
The late actor Gary Merrill advocated nudism. Christy Brinkley openly admits to
frequenting nude beaches, and Christian singer Amy Grant goes top free on
foreign beaches while on tour overseas. Even the late Dr. Seuss published
approval of a nudist philosophy, in one of his first books.
165.
Historically, a great many writers and artists have regarded Naturism, or
something close to it, to be part of the utopian ideal.
R.
Martin writes: "Anthropologically, nakedness would seem to be the best and
worst of conditions. Involuntary stripping to nakedness is defeat or poverty,
but willed nakedness may be a perfect form." Nudity is also
consistent with the Christian utopian concept of heaven, in which, according to
biblical accounts, clothing is not necessary.
166.
Nudity has often been used, historically, as a symbol of protest or rebellion
against oppression.
For
example, the early Quakers, in mid-17th century England, often used nudity as an
element of protest. Historian Elbert Russell notes that "A number of men
and women were arrested and punished for public indecency because they appeared
in public naked 'as a sign.' George Fox and other leaders defended the practice,
when the doer felt it a religious duty to do so. . . . The suggestion
of such a sign came apparently from Isaiah's walking 'naked and barefoot three
years' (Isaiah 20:2,3)." The Doukhobors, a radical Christian sect,
used nudity as a social protest in Canada in the early 1900s. Paul Ableman
records that "In May, 1979, Emperor Bokassa . . . a minor Central
African tyrant, arrested a large number of children on charges of sedition and
massacred some of them. According to The Guardian (London) of 18 May,
'Hundreds of women demonstrated naked outside the prison until the survivors
were released.'"
In
the 1920s, as part of a widening rebellion against genteel society, the size of
bathing suits began to diminish. Nude beaches, reaching their height of
popularity in the 1970s, are the ultimate result of this process of social
emancipation. The free body movement in general in the 1970s fit this social and
historical pattern. Examples include casual nudity at Woodstock;
"nude-in" demonstrations; and a record-setting demonstration by
Athens, Georgia university students on March 7, 1974, when more than 1500 went
naked on their college campus. It took tear gas to make the students dress.
Historical origins of the repression of nudity
167.
Repressive morality was developed by the state and the Church as a tool to
maintain control over otherwise free individuals.
Paul
Ableman writes: "A complex civilization has an enormous investment in
differentiated apparel. It is no accident that one of the first matters that a
revolutionary regime turns its attention to is clothing. The French Revolution
decreed classical grace and simplicity. The Chinese homogenized clothing. The
Ayatollah Khomeini in Iran returned women to the black chador and so on. . . .
Sexual energy is needed by the authorities of the world to maintain order. . . .
It immediately becomes obvious why the true obscenity of killing and violence
has always been of less concern to those in power than the pseudo-obscenity of
erotic acts. Death provides no scope for a network of regulations by which
society can be manipulated. . . . But sex is a permanent fountain of
dynamic energy, which can be tapped for social purposes by regulations
concerning marriage, divorce, adultery, fornication, incest, homosexuality,
bestiality, chastity, promiscuity, decency and so on. All those who wield power
intuitively perceive that in the last resort their authority derives from the
repression, and regulation, of sexuality, and that free-flowing sexuality is the
biological equivalent of anarchy. All transferals of power, all revolutions, are
invariably accompanied by transformations of the regulations governing
sexuality." Seymour Fisher writes: "The implications of nudity
as a way of declaring one's complete freedom have often elicited strong
countermeasures from those in authority. Nudity is punishable by death in some
cultures. The Roman Catholic church has taught in convent schools that it is
sinful to expose your body even to your own eyes. The wearing of clothes
represents a form of submission to prevailing mores. It is like putting on a
'citizen's uniform' and agreeing to play the game."
168.
Repressive morality has often sought to control not only nudity, but sexuality
in general.
Margaret
Miles observes that "the regulation of sexuality was a major power issue in
the fourth-century Christian churches. Regulation of sexual practices was a way
to inject the authority of church laws and leaders into the intimate and daily
relationships of Christians. Analyzing the canons of the Council of Gangra in AD
309, [Samuel] Laeuchli found that 46 percent of the eighty-one canons were
concerned with sexual relationships and practices." Philip Yancey
notes that "between the third and tenth centuries, church authorities
issued edicts forbidding sex on Saturdays, Wednesdays, and Fridays, and also
during the 40-day fast periods before Easter, Christmas, and Whitsuntide-all
for religious reasons. They kept adding feast days and days of the apostles to
the proscription, as well as the days of female impurity, until it reached the
point that, as Yale historian John Boswell has estimated, only 44 days a year
remained available for marital sex. Human nature being what it is, the church's
proscriptions were enthusiastically ignored." Don Mackenzie notes
that Christ and the very earliest church, in contrast, emphasized a message of
freedom-"from demonic powers, from tyrannical governments, from fate. . . .
[and] a prevailing commitment to the separation of secular and ecclesiastical
power. . . . [The Church] adopted asceticism, not in obedience to its
founder's teachings but as a bid for support in the face of competition,
offering spiritual solace to people whose material world (the Roman Empire) was
collapsing. Once the Church was officially recognized, it promptly discarded
Christ's dedication to poverty, but it clung tightly to sexual asceticism as a
disciplinary tool in a disintegrating society."
169.
Repression of nudity is still used today as a means to further a repressive
political agenda.
Regarding
nude beaches, Patrick Buchanan, on PBS's "McLaughlin Report," said,
"I think we ought to let the liberals do it, if they want to do it. Then
take photographs and use them in attack ads." The right-wing
Christian Coalition uses blanket attacks on mere nudity and other matters of
"morality" to rally support for their cause. Their method, as
described by ACLU Executive Director Ira Glasser, is "to prey upon the
fears of millions of people who are all too willing to believe that sacrificing
personal liberty will help solve our nation's problems." A Missouri
legislator, in 1993, introduced a bill that would have made virtually all public
nudity-and even some nudity in the home-a felony punishable by up to ten
years in prison! This bill was fortunately defeated, though by a narrow margin.
Similar bills have been proposed all over the country in recent years.
170.
Much of the origin of repressive attitudes toward nudity may be traced to the
political setting of the early church and church-state, though not the
teachings of Christ Himself.
The
earliest writings of the Christian church show no evidence of the negative
attitude toward sexuality and nudity which so characterize later years. This
negative attitude grew slowly among some segments of the faith, but was by no
means universal. For some, asceticism represented a means of remaining pure for
the impending return of Christ. For others, it was a reaction against the
hedonism and homosexuality common in Greek culture, or against the sexual
excesses of the dying Roman Empire. For some, it grew out of a mixture of
Christianity with the legalism of traditional Judaism; and for many, it grew out
of preexisting personal and cultural prejudices. Clement of Alexandria, in the
late 2nd century, and Thascius Caecilius Cyprianus, in the mid 3rd century, both
condemned the nudity common in Roman public baths primarily because it offended
their personal ideas of female modesty. (In the same era, Tertullian was
condemning women as the "gateway of the Devil.") Jerome, in the late
4th and early 5th centuries, also condemned nude bathing, especially for women.
He considered pregnant women revolting, and felt that virgins should blush at
the very idea of seeing themselves naked. On the other hand, in the same period,
Jovinianus, a Christian monk, campaigned actively in favor of the public baths.
In the end, the decisive actor in the controversy was Augustine. He was a firm
believer in the doctrine, introduced long after Christ, that the body and
sexuality are inherently sinful. (He applied this doctrine to women's bodies and
sexuality especially aggressively.) Augustine was a shrewd politician. By
aligning himself closely with the imperial court at the beginning of the 5th
century, he effectively ensured that his version of Christianity became the
dominant one. By the Dark Ages, with the collapse of the Roman Empire, the
Church became the last remnant of Western civilization, with a monopoly on
education, and tremendous control over ideas. Thus Augustine's heritage of
anti-sexuality became the predominant force in Christianity, even though such
ideas are impossible to find in the teachings of Christ Himself.
The
earliest writings of the Christian church show no evidence of the negative
attitude toward sexuality and nudity which so characterize later years. This
negative attitude grew slowly among some segments of the faith, but was by no
means universal. For some, asceticism represented a means of remaining pure for
the impending return of Christ. For others, it was a reaction against the
hedonism and homosexuality common in Greek culture, or against the sexual
excesses of the dying Roman Empire. For some, it grew out of a mixture of
Christianity with the legalism of traditional Judaism; and for many, it grew out
of preexisting personal and cultural prejudices. Clement of Alexandria, in the
late 2nd century, and Thascius Caecilius Cyprianus, in the mid 3rd century, both
condemned the nudity common in Roman public baths primarily because it offended
their personal ideas of female modesty. (In the same era, Tertullian was
condemning women as the "gateway of the Devil.") Jerome, in the late
4th and early 5th centuries, also condemned nude bathing, especially for women.
He considered pregnant women revolting, and felt that virgins should blush at
the very idea of seeing themselves naked. On the other hand, in the same period,
Jovinianus, a Christian monk, campaigned actively in favor of the public baths.
In the end, the decisive actor in the controversy was Augustine. He was a firm
believer in the doctrine, introduced long after Christ, that the body and
sexuality are inherently sinful. (He applied this doctrine to women's bodies and
sexuality especially aggressively.) Augustine was a shrewd politician. By
aligning himself closely with the imperial court at the beginning of the 5th
century, he effectively ensured that his version of Christianity became the
dominant one. By the Dark Ages, with the collapse of the Roman Empire, the
Church became the last remnant of Western civilization, with a monopoly on
education, and tremendous control over ideas. Thus Augustine's heritage of
anti-sexuality became the predominant force in Christianity, even though such
ideas are impossible to find in the teachings of Christ Himself.
171.
The aversion of early Christian church leaders to casual nudity was due in part
to an association of nudity with paganism and homosexuality in the surrounding
cultures.
In
many pre-Christian pagan religions, such as those practiced in western Europe
and Great Britain, nudity-especially female nudity-was a powerful force, and
played an important role in pagan worship and rituals.
172.
The Church's aversion to nudity derived, in part, from its roots in the cultures
of the ancient Near East, where nakedness had signified poverty, shame, slavery,
humiliation, and defeat. Naked, bound prisoners were paraded in the king's
victory celebration, and slain enemies were stripped of clothing and armor.
173.
Before Western civilization, nakedness was a normal element of life and
considered acceptable in many circumstances. However, as Freud describes in Civilization
and Its Discontents, psychological repression of the awareness of our
natural being was a necessary step in building civilization, by disciplining the
masses into taking part in vast and self-abdicating social projects.
Lee
Baxandall notes that, by contrast, "the post-industrial, newly greening era
offers fresh options, a chance to integrate the natural human being with
post-industrial values, technology, and knowledge."
174.
Nudity has often been censored primarily to avoid the more difficult task of
managing it.
175.
Recreation managers often "permit" nudity on remote beaches without
facilities or lifeguards, then use nudity as a scapegoat for problems including
litter and drug use that inevitably appear in high-use recreation areas without
active management.
176.
One of the greatest challenges faced by clothing-optional beaches is that their
popularity, combined with their scarcity, leads to intensive use, which in turn
conflicts with environmental and management concerns.
This
has been a source of problems at several beaches across the country, including
Sandy Hook in New Jersey, and Cape Cod National Seashore, which closed its
traditionally nude beach ostensibly for environmental reasons in the mid 1970s.
177.
The "secondary effects" of an actively managed nude beach have in
actual experience proven to be less crime, less inappropriate behavior, no drug
dealers, an increase in parking revenues, and an increase in business in the
adjoining commercial area.
178.
Nudity has often been repressed for economic reasons, not because it was
considered immoral.
Bernard
Rudofsky writes: "In the 1920s, in some parts of Europe people used to
bathe in public without feeling the need for a special dress. At the height of
summer the beaches on the Black Sea swarmed with bathers who had never seen a
bathing suit except in newspapers and picture magazines; their holiday was one
of untroubled simplicity. . . . The idyll came to an end a few years
later when tourism reared its ugly head, and the protests of foreign visitors
led to making bathing suits compulsory." The same thing has recently
happened in the former East Germany, where traditionally nude beaches are now
being restricted to appease more conservative European tourists.
179.
We must never forget that for any freedom that is lost, we bear partial
responsibility for letting it be lost.
In
the words of Frederick Douglass: "Find out just what people will submit to
and you have found out the exact amount of justice and wrong which will be
imposed upon them. . . . The limits of tyrants are prescribed by the
endurance of those who they oppress."
Christianity supports Naturism
180.
Genesis 1:27-The (naked) human body, created by God, in God's own image, is
basically decent, not inherently impure or sinful. The human body was created by
God, and God can create no evil. It is made in God's image, and the image of God
is entirely pure and good.
181.
Genesis 1:31-God saw that everything, including naked Adam and Eve, was good.
182.
Genesis 3:7-Many scholars interpret the wearing of fig leaves as a
continuation and expansion of the original sin, not a positive moral reaction to
it.
Hugh
Kilmer explains: "Man wanted to put his life within his own control rather
than God's, so first he took the power of self-determination (knowledge of good
and evil). Next, finding his body was not within his control, he controlled it
artificially by hiding it. After he was expelled from paradise, he began to hunt
and eat animals; then to gain complete control over other people, by killing
them (the story of Cain and Abel)."
183.
Genesis 3:10-Many scholars believe that Adam and Eve's sense of shame came not
from their nakedness, which God had created and called good, but from their
knowledge of having disobeyed God.
184.
An innate, God-given sense of shame related to nakedness is contradicted by the
existence of numerous indigenous societies in which nudity is the rule and a
sense of shame is totally absent, and by the lack of shame felt by naked
children.
185.
Genesis 3:11-It was disobedience that came between Adam and Eve and God, not
nakedness. The scriptures themselves treat Adam and Eve's nudity as an
incidental issue.
Robert
Bahr observes that "when Adam and Eve disobeyed God, they grew ashamed of
what they had done and attempted to hide themselves from God, who was not the
least bit concerned with their nakedness but was mightily unhappy with their
disobedience." Herb Seal notes that God provided a covering by
slaying an innocent animal: the first prototype of the innocent one slain to act
as a "covering" for sinners.
186.
Genesis 3:21-God made garments of skins for Adam, but the Bible does not say
the state of nakedness is being condemned. Because of the Fall, Adam and Eve
were no longer in Eden and were thus subject to the varieties of weather and
climate, and God knew they would need clothes. God loved and cared for them even
after they had sinned.
187.
To assume that because God made garments He was condemning nudity makes as much
sense as concluding that because God made clouds which blot out the sun He was
condemning sunshine.
188.
Genesis 9:22-24-Noah was both drunk and naked, but Ham was the one who was
cursed-when he dishonored his father, by calling attention to Noah's state,
and making light of it.
The
shame of Noah's "nakedness" was much more than just being undressed.
It was his dehumanized, drunken stupor which was shameful. Ham's offense was not
merely seeing his father in this shameful state, but gossiping about it,
effectively destroying Noah's reputation, cultural status, and authority as a
father figure. In the story, Shem and Japheth were blessed for coming to the
defense of their father's honor. Rather than joining Ham in his boasting, they
reverently covered their father's shame.
189.
Exodus 20:26-The Priest's nakedness was not to be exposed because it would
create dissonance between his social role, in which he was to be seen as
sexually neutral, and his biological status as a sexual being. The Priest's
costume represented his social role; to be exposed in that context would be
inappropriate and distracting.
Rita
Poretsky writes: "Personhood, original sexual energy, and physical
nakedness may be either in synchrony with social institutions or in disharmony.
. . . Nakedness is a nakedness of self in a social context, not just a
nakedness of body." On the other hand, it was quite appropriate for
David to dance essentially naked in public to celebrate the return of the Ark of
the Covenant (II Samuel 6:14-23).
190.
Leviticus 18:6-19-Here and throughout the Old Testament and Torah, the
expression "uncover the nakedness of" (as it is literally translated
in the King James Version) is a euphemism for "have sexual relations
with." The prohibitions do not refer to nudity per se.
191.
I Samuel 19:23-24-Jewish prophets were commonly naked-so commonly that when
Saul stripped off his clothes and prophesied, no one considered his nakedness
remarkable, but everyone immediately assumed that he must be a prophet also.
192.
II Samuel 6:14-23-King David danced nearly naked in the City of David to
celebrate the return of the ark, in full view of all the citizens of the city.
Michael criticized his public nudity and was rebuffed.
King
David was not strictly naked-he wore a "linen ephod," a sort of
short apron or close-fitting, armless, outer vest, extending at the most down to
the hips. Ephods were part of the vestments worn by Jewish priests. They hid
nothing.
193.
Isaiah 20:2-3-God directly commanded Isaiah to loose the sackcloth from his
hips, and he went naked and barefoot for three years. The prophet Micah may have
done the same thing (see Micah 1:8).
194.
Song of Solomon repeatedly expresses appreciation for the naked body.
195.
Every Biblical association of nakedness with shame is in reference to a sin
already committed. One cannot hide from God behind literal or figurative
clothing. All stand naked before God.
196.
Nakedness cannot automatically be equated with sexual sin.
Linking
nudity with sexual sin, to the exclusion of all else, makes as much sense as
insisting that fire can only be connected to the destruction of property and
life, and is therefore immoral. Sin comes not from nakedness, but from how the
state of nakedness is used. Ian Barbour writes: "No aspect of man is evil
in itself, but only in its misuse. The inherent goodness of the material order,
in which man's being fully participates, is, as we shall see, a corollary of the
doctrine of creation."
Pope
John Paul II agrees that nudity, in and of itself, is not sinful. "The
human body in itself always has its own inalienable human dignity," he
says. It is only obscene when it is reduced to "an object of 'enjoyment,'
meant for the gratification of concupiscence itself."
197.
Nakedness cannot automatically be associated with lust.
It
is not reasonable to cover the apples in the marketplace just because someone
might may be tempted by gluttony, nor is it necessary to ban money because
someone might be overcome by greed. Nor is it reasonable to ban nudity, simply
because an individual might be tempted to lust. Furthermore, appreciation for
the beauty of a member of the other sex, nude or otherwise, cannot be equated
automatically with lust. Only if desire is added does appreciation become lust,
and therefore sin. Even then, it is the one who lusts, not the object of lust,
who has sinned. Bathesheba was never rebuked for bathing, but David for lusting
(II Samuel 11:2-12:12). Pope John Paul II writes: "There are circumstances
in which nakedness is not immodest. If someone takes advantage of such an
occasion to treat the person as an object of enjoyment (even if his action is
purely internal) it is only he who is guilty of shamelessness . . .
not the other." Margaret Miles observes that "Nakedness and
sexuality or lust were seldom associated in patristic writings."
198.
Many historical church leaders have disassociated nudity with sexual immodesty.
St. Thomas Aquinus, for example, defined an immodest act as one done with a
lustful intention. Therefore, someone who disrobes for the sole purpose of
bathing or recreating cannot be accused of immodesty.
Pope
John Paul II writes: "Sexual modesty cannot then in any simple way be
identified with the use of clothing, nor shamelessness with the absence of
clothing and total or partial nakedness. . . . Immodesty is present
only when nakedness plays a negative role with regard to the value of the
person, when its aim is to arouse concupiscence, as a result of which the person
is put in the position of an object for enjoyment. . . . There are
certain objective situations in which even total nudity of the body is not
immodest."
199.
Through Christ, the Christian is returned spiritually to the same sinless,
shameless state Adam and Eve enjoyed in Eden (Genesis 2:25). There is no
question that their nakedness was not sinful. When God creates, nakedness is
good. It follows that when God re-creates, nakedness is also good.
200.
The Bible says plainly that sexual immorality is sin. Healthy Naturism, however,
is entirely consistent for the Christian, who has "crucified the sinful
nature with its passions and desires." (Galatians 5:24)
201.
The Bible calls for purity of heart. Anyone who thinks it is impossible to be
pure of heart while nude is ignorant of the realities of nudism, and anyone who
believes that it is wrong even for the pure of heart to be nude has fallen into
legalism, a vice which St. Paul repeatedly denounces.
St.
Paul writes: "See to it that no one takes you captive through hollow and
deceptive philosophy, which depends on human tradition and the basic principles
of this world rather than on Christ. . . . Since you died with Christ
to the basic principles of the world, why, as though you still belonged to it,
do you submit to its rules: 'Do not handle! Do not taste! Do not touch!'? These
are all destined to perish with use, because they are based on human commands
and teachings. Such regulations indeed have an appearance of wisdom, with their
self-imposed worship, their false humility and their harsh treatment of the
body, but they lack any value in restraining sensual indulgence. . . .
Therefore, as God's chosen people, holy and dearly loved, clothe yourselves with
compassion, kindness, humility, gentleness, and patience." (Colossians 2:8,
20-23; 3:12)
202.
Clothes-compulsiveness creates an unwholesome schism between one's spirit and
body. A Christian morality should deal with the person as a whole, healing both
spirit and body.
203.
Nudity has often been used in the Christian tradition as symbolic of renouncing
the world to follow Christ.
Margaret
Miles writes: "In the thirteenth century, Saint Bernard of Clairvoux
popularized the idea of nudity as symbolic imitation of Christ; it took Saint
Francis to act out this metaphor. Francis announced his betrothal to Lady
Poverty [i.e. his renunciation of material possessions] by publicly stripping
off his clothing and flinging it at the feet of his protesting father" and
the local bishop. Several Christian sects have practiced nudity as part of their
faith, including the German Brethren of the Free Spirit, in the thirteenth
century; the Picards, in fifteenth century France; and, most famously, the
Adamites, in the early fifteenth century Netherlands.
204.
Many other faiths also support nudity, both historically and in current
practice.
For
example, the "Digambar" or "sky-clad" monks of Digambar
Jainism have gone completely naked as part of their ascetic tradition for 2500
years, though nudity is rare in the dominant Hindu religion. Many other
(males-only) Hindu religious orders also practice ritualistic nudity or
near-nudity, as they have for hundreds or thousands of years. Tribal Hindus held
an annual nude worship service attracting 100,000 in Chandragutti, India until
1987, when it was stopped by the police, in reaction to violence which had
erupted the previous year when social workers tried to force clothing on the
participants.
Personal experience supports Naturism
205.
One of the most important arguments in support of nudism is personal experience.
Personal testimonies in favor of nudism are too numerous to mention. Based on my
own experience, I find nudists to be more friendly, open-minded, considerate,
respectful, and sharing than non-nudists in general. Their children are more
active, and healthier, both physically and mentally. None of these testimonies,
of course, compares to personal experience. A single visit to a nudist park or a
nude beach will not cause permanent harm to anyone. On the other hand, it may
change your life. Experience the freedom for yourself!
Updated: 3/19/11