Weekend Herald - Canvas

The changing cultural phenomenon of exercise

- — Reviewed by David Herkt

SWEAT: A HISTORY OF EXERCISE by Bill Hayes (Bloomsbury, $33)

One has to admire Bill Hayes. Wondering about how athletes competed naked in the original Greek Olympic Games and the “flop factor” as male genitals bounced and slapped, Hayes does comparativ­e trials sprinting and re-sprinting a mile course along a secluded country lane. “Can you actually run a race without athletic support?” he asks.

Firstly, he does his experiment fullycloth­ed and fully supported as a control, and then strips off and repeats it nude, expecting a lot of “jostling” and flapping, only to find that his scrotum very quickly tightens and contracts. His penis retracts to a fraction of its former size. Now, he even resembles the marble statues of Greek athletes with their oft-mocked penile length.

This is just one of the many practical revelation­s of Sweat: A History of Exercise. Contrary to what we might think, exercise is just as much a changing cultural phenomenon as hair-dressing styles. Sweat explores its history and its basis in physiology and culture. The book reveals philosophi­es, regimens, trends and their origins.

Hayes is a breezy writer. He carries his informatio­n lightly and contextual­ises in a way that makes it relevant to contempora­ry life. Although the reader might find themselves, for instance, in an array of Renaissanc­e writers on exercise, they are inset into Hayes’ personal exploratio­ns of present-day gyms, “gym-rats”, library stacks in several countries, and their sometimes very mysterious librarians. He tracks down one series of Renaissanc­e gymnastic illustrati­ons to a library on the tiny Isola Bella on Lake Maggiore, in Northern Italy.

There are many historic tit-bits for the curious. The late American Supreme Court Judge Ruth Bader Ginsberg, would begin her day, even in her early 80s, with 20 push-ups, and finish with an evening exercise routine. And the name of philosophe­r Plato was a nickname meaning “broad-chested”’ based on the fact he mastered wrestling early in his life. His real name was probably Aristocles.

Sweat also guides the reader through Scandinavi­an exercise regimes, bicycles, yoga, the life of the bodybuilde­r Sandow, Arnold Schwarzene­gger posing nude for Cosmopolit­an, aerobics, and Hayes’ own experience­s of the Aids epidemic. It is a wide range.

Hayes was the partner of the late Oliver Sacks, the neurologis­t, popular writer, and “poet-laureate of contempora­ry medicine”, and has an eye for the telling details and narrative connection­s that enlighten as well as provide narrative impetus. His books on insomnia,

New York City, and his relationsh­ip with Sacks have all been best-sellers. Sweat has the same broad appeal.

In recently published non-fiction, the personal narrator has come to the fore. Just as in documentar­y TV or film, the individual­ised perspectiv­e is the voice of our times. Hayes is the perfect example — engaging, erudite, and never dull.

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Bill Hayes.

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