In an age that doesn't think too much about history, you might be forgiven for thinking that a culture of exercise only emerged in the 20th century. But the idea of purposefully exercising to change one's body — what folks used to call "physical culture" — likely goes back to the very beginnings of time.Here to unpack the origins, evolution, and future of fitness is Dr. Conor Heffernan, a Lecturer in the Sociology of Sport at Ulster University and the author of The History of Physical Culture. Today on the show, Conor takes us on a fascinating and wide-ranging tour of physical culture, from the ancient Egyptians, who made their pharaohs run around a pyramid to test their fitness to rule, to the ancient Greeks who used their gymnasiums for both bodily training and intellectual philosophizing, to modern strongmen who became proto fitness influencers, and many periods and societies in between. We discuss how training practices changed over time, where they may be going next, and the evergreen principles from past eras that we could still learn from today.Resources Related to the Podcast
AoM Podcast #988: Of Strength and Soul — Exploring the Philosophy of Physical Fitness
AoM Podcast #939: What Lifting Ancient Stones Can Teach You About Being a Man
Rogue documentaries on stone lifting in Scotland, Iceland, and Spain
AoM Podcast #39: Eugen Sandow, Victorian Strongman
AoM Podcast #624: The Crazy, Forgotten Story of America’s First Fitness Influencer, Bernarr MacFadden
AoM Article: An Introduction to Indian Club Training
AoM Video: Intro to Indian Club Training
De Arte Gymnastica
Johann GutsMuths
Friedrich Ludwig Jahn
Turnvereine gymnastic system
The Strongman Project
Connect With Conor Heffernan
Physical Culture Study website
Conor's faculty page
See Privacy Policy at https://art19.com/privacy and California Privacy Notice at https://art19.com/privacy#do-not-sell-my-info.