Naturism or
nudism is a
cultural and
political movement advocating and
defending social
nudity in private and in
public. It may also refer to a
lifestyle based on personal, family and/or social nudism.
The
naturist philosophy has several sources, many of which can be
traced back to the health and fitness philosophy in Germany
in the early
twentieth century, though the concept of returning to nature, and
creating equality are also cited as inspiration.
From
Germany the idea spread to England
, Canada
, the
United
States
and beyond where a network of clubs
developed. The model of
German
naturism is to promote naturist family and recreational sports,
with the
DFK being a member of the
German Olympic Sport
Federation (
DOSB).
French
naturism, on
the other hand, developed on the basis of large holiday complexes. This concept in turn
influenced Québec
and then the
United States. A subsequent development was
tourist naturism, where nudist resorts would be
built to cater for the nudist tourist, without any local base.
This
concept is most noticeable in the Caribbean
.
More recently,
clothes-free beaches and
other types of anonymous nudist activities have served those who
wish to take part in naturist activities without belonging to any
clubs.
Naturism can contain aspects of eroticism for some people and at
different times in history, although many modern naturists and
naturist organisations argue it does not, while the public and the
media often simplify this relationship.
Naturism today
The word naturism was used for the first time in 1778 by a
French-speaking Belgian, Jean Baptiste Luc Planchon (1734-1781),
and was advocated as a means of improving the 'l’hygiène de vie'
(natural style of life) and health.
According
to the international definition adopted by the XIV Congress of the
International Naturist
Federation (Agde
, 1974),
naturism is:
- "a lifestyle in harmony with nature,
expressed through social nudity, and
characterised by self-respect of people
with different opinions and of the environment."
The International Naturist Federation explains:
- "Each country has its own kind of naturism, and even each
club has its own special character, for we too, human beings, have
each our own character which is reflected in our
surroundings."
The usage and definition of these terms varies geographically and
historically. Though in the United States, naturism and nudism have
very similar meanings, in Britain there is a clear distinction.
Nudism is the
act of being naked, while naturism is a
lifestyle which at various times embraced nature,
environment, respect for others, self-respect, crafts, healthy
eating, vegetarianism, teetotalism, non-smoking, yoga, physical
exercise and pacifism as well as nudity.
In naturist parlance, the word
textilist is used to
describe someone who is not a naturist, or the act of not being
naturist. e.g.
He stayed all week but was textilist all the
time. It is also used as an adjective to describe a facility
where naturism is not allowed e.g. "the textilist beach starts at
the flag".
Clothing optional and
nude optional
(US specific) describe a policy or a venue that allows or
encourages nudity but tolerates the wearing of clothes. The
opposite is
clothing compulsory; that is, disallowing
nudity, thus requiring the wearing of clothes.
Clothes
free/clothes-free and
clothing free/clothing-free are
used as adjectives to describe when naturism is permitted in an
otherwise textilist environment.
The social nudity movement includes a large range of variants
including "naturism", "nudism", "
Freikörperkultur (FKK)", the "
free beach movement" as well as generalized
"public lands/
public nudity" advocacy.
There is a large amount of shared history and common themes, issues
and philosophy, but differences between these separate movements
remain contentious.
- See also:
labels, associations and terminology for an extended discussion
and disambiguation.
Types of naturism

Sign at swimming pool depicting, among
other requirements, that no clothing is to be worn.
Naturism is practised in many ways: Marc Alain Descamps, in his
study written in French, classified the types as:individual nudism,
nudism within family, nudism in the wild, social nudism. To that we
can add the militant naturist, campaigning or extreme
naturists.
Personal and family nudism
Nudism is often practiced in a person's home or garden, either
alone or with members of the family.
A Canadian survey showed that 39% of all Canadians would or have
walked around the house nude. And in British Columbia this is as
high as 51%. Individual nudism can also include sleeping in the
nude, but this is sometimes seen as a health benefit, due to the
fact that, when naked in bed, it can be much easier to relax and
fall asleep, resulting in longer and more restful sleep but it can
also be for the reason of comfort.
Social nudism
Social nudism is nudism in a social context, either at ones home
with friends or with acquaintances at a nudist event or facility,
such as a naturist club, community, centre,
resort or other facility. (The terms are
loosely defined and there are some regional differences.) At
naturist events or venues clothing is usually optional, except by
swimming pools or sunbathing lawns where complete nudity is
expected, weather permitting. This rule is sometimes a source of
controversy among some naturists. Staff at a naturist facility are
sometimes required to be clothed due to health and safety
regulations.

Families enjoying the swimming at
Monts de Bussy, Haute Vienne, France.
Facilities for naturists are classified in various ways. A
landed or
members' naturist club
is one that owns its own facilities, while
non-landed (or travel) clubs meet at various
locations, such as private residences, swimming pools, hot springs,
landed clubs and resorts, and rented facilities. Landed clubs can
be run by members on democratic lines or by one or more owners who
make the rules. In either case, they can determine membership
criteria and the obligations of members. This usually involves
sharing work necessary to maintain or develop the site.
Some clubs have stricter entrance requirements than some
traditional 'country clubs', including the requirement to supply
references, a sponsoring member, a trial membership, committee
approval and/or, criminal background checks. UK clubs are now
required to have child protection policies in place, and designated
child protection officers. Many clubs promote frequent social
activities.
The international naturist organisations were mainly composed of
representatives of landed clubs. "
Nudist
colony" is no longer a favored term, but it is used by
naturists as a term of derision for landed clubs that have rigid
non inclusive membership criteria, and in meta-data on naturist
websites.
A
holiday centre is a facility that specialises in
providing apartments, chalets and camping pitches for visiting
holidaymakers. The centre is run commercially, and visitors are not
members and have no say in the management. Most holiday centres
expect visitors to hold an INF card, that is be a member of their
national organisation, but some have relaxed this restriction,
relying on the carrying of a trade card. Holiday centres can be
quite small, just a couple of hectares or large occupying over 300
hectares. In a large holiday centre there will be swimming pools,
sports pitches, an entertainment program, kids' clubs, restaurants
and supermarkets. Some holiday centres allow regular visitors to
purchase their own chalets, and generations of the same families
will visit each year. Holiday centres are more relaxed about
textilists than members clubs; total nudity is usual in the
swimming pools and the beaches, while on the football pitches, or
in the restaurants in the evening, it is rare.
A
naturist resort is, to a European, an
essentially urban development where naturism is the norm.
Cap d'Agde
in France, naturist village Charco del Palo on
Lanzarote, Canary Islands, and Vera Playa
in Spain are examples. Here there are
apartment blocks, with privately-owned and rented apartments. For
some residents this is their year-round home. One finds all the
usual facilities of a small town. In the US usage, a naturist
resort can mean a holiday centre.
Freikörperkultur (FKK) (see
article in German)
literally translated as free body culture is the name for
the general movement in Germany
. The
abbreviation is widely recognised all over Europe and often found
on informal signs indicating the direction to a remote naturist
beach.
Nude beaches
Clothing is optional at
nude beaches (or
free beaches). Some beaches have been clothes free beyond living
memory, and their status has been formalised by becoming official
nude beaches, while others, though not official, have become
unofficial nude beaches through toleration by local authorities. In
some European countries, such as Denmark and Norway, all beaches
are clothing optional, while in others like Germany there are
naturist sunbathing areas in public parks, e.g.,
in Munich.
A feature of bathing on a nude beach is the anonymity it offers,
where membership of a club is not required with detailed
application processes, nor pre-booking of visits.
Though free beaches developed separately from national naturist
bodies, these bodies are taking an interest and helping to protect
them legally, and through the publication of guidelines of
acceptable behaviour. In North America, the
Free Beach
Movement was the name of a group that was opposed to the
direction of the official nudist organisation, the
American Association
for Nude Recreation, and set up the rival body
The Naturist Society.
Other nudist activities

Naked horse riding

Hiking in the Alps
There are many activities which various people can do in the nude,
either as individuals or in groups. These include nude swimming
(sometimes called
skinny dipping) in
a river, lake, swimming hole or other body of water; nude
snorkeling and nude diving; nude canoeing or kayaking (sometimes
called canuding); nude hiking (sometimes called
free hiking or naked rambling) in the remote
countryside; nude horse or cycle riding (free riding) in the remote
countryside; and other more traditional nudist sporting
activities.
Campaigning naturism
- Vincent Bethell conducted the
The Freedom to be
Yourself campaign.
- World Naked Bike Ride,
mass clothing optional (but substantially naturist) bike rides
protesting the oil economy and vulnerability of cyclists.
- Day Without Bathing Suits. It began in Spain in 2007. From 2009
is extending all over the world.
- Steve Gough, UK walker who has
walked from Lands End to John O'Groats naked.
- Spencer Tunick mass nude
photography.
- Mark Storey is a member of the
Naturist Action Committee,
directed by Bob Morton, a sister
organisation to the US The Naturist
Society. He co-founded the Body Freedom Collaborative in
Seattle
with
Daniel Johnson, Washington
state in the US, whose goal is to bring attention for the need for
legal clothing-optional beaches through "guerilla pranksterism",
among other approaches.
- Émile Armand French
anarchist?.
- The Sex Party of
British Columbia (Canada) promotes normalization of all parts
of the human body and destigmatizing human sexual organs. It would
pass legislation requiring all public parks and beaches larger than
one hectare to designate areas reserved for nudists.
- The Dutch party Naastenliefde, Vrijheid
en Diversiteit would pass legislation to make public nudity legal everywhere, provided that
a towel is used when sitting on a public bench.
- Starkers! and the emergence of clubbing culture and naturism developed in
London.
- The
short-lived Naturist Lifestyle Party in New South Wales
, Australia aimed "to bring naturism fully into the
public eye, with view to getting an equitable allocation of public
resources to those who support the naturist lifestyle."
Nude protests have a long history:
Doukhobor,
Women's
Institute Calendar.
Philosophy
Naturism had many different philosophical sources
and means many things to different people. There is no one
definition. The INF have framed this definition:
- :Naturism is a lifestyle in harmony with
nature, expressed through social nudity, and characterised by
self-respect of people with different opinions and of the
environment.
At one end of the spectrum are the nudists who just enjoy a nude
life style, and at the other are the naturists, who have deeply
held beliefs and see communal nudity as just one of many important
principles. The INF definition is a compromise that has held since
1974. In it you can see the elements:
lifestyle, harmony with
nature, social nudity, self respect, differing opinions, respect
for the environment.
Gymnosophy and religious nakedness
see also Gymnosophist
In the fourth century BC,
Alexander
the Great encountered, in India, wandering groups of naked holy
men whom he dubbed the
naked philosophers. (
Gr
gymnos
: naked; sophist
: knowledge). The
philosopher
Onesicritus investigated
their beliefs and lifestyle.
Pyrrho the
Sceptic was impressed and incorporated
nudity into his philosophy. The Gymnosophists were
Hindus, but
Jain and
Ajivika monks
practised nudity as a statement that they
had given up all worldly goods. Nudity was not a new concept to the
Greeks as the
Olympic Games (founded
in 776 BC) were exclusively male and nude events.
Gymnastics and
gymnasium share the same root word
(
Gr gymnos).
The first English naturists adopted the name Gymnosophy as a thinly
disguised euphemism for their pastime. The
English Gymnosophical Society
was formed in 1922 and became the
New Gymnosophy Society in 1926; they
purchased land at 'Bricketts Wood' to become Britain's first
nudist colony. One of the first
members was
Gerald Gardner, who in
1945 established the 'Five Acres Club' nearby, ostensibly as a
nudist club, but as a front for
Wiccans, as
witchcraft was illegal in England until
1951.
The
Digambar, one of the two main divisions
of the
Jain religion of India, remain
'skyclad', or naked, though generally it is practised by males.
Digambar means 'clothed with the sky'.
Wiccans have adopted this wording and some practise
their rituals 'skyclad'.
Historically, the
Adamites, a
Gnostic sect, practiced
religious nudism.Another religious sect,
the
Doukhobors, migrated from Russia to
western Canada. They practise or practised occasional nudity, such
as while working in the farm fields. Members of one of the three
subdivisions of Canadian Doukhobors, the small radical
Sons of Freedom group,
went so far in the 1900s as to publicly strip in mass public
demonstrations to protest against government policies which were
meant to assimilate them. Today,
Christian naturism contains various
members associated with most
denominations. Although beliefs vary,
a common theme is that much of Christianity has misinterpreted the
events regarding the
Garden of Eden,
and God was displeased with
Adam and
Eve for covering their bodies with
fig
leaves.
Family in Brazil, Praia do Abricó
Naturist ideals
Groups have been formed to live their dreams, and then split up
over questions of principles. There are many examples of the
differences between various groups, often resulting in two or more
national organisations. Here is a non-exclusive list, taken from
Descamps, of the ideas that have united various naturists and
become points of fierce contention for others.
- Rapport with animal life — having an ecological conscience
- Rapport with the environment — being an environmentalist
- Health — bathing in the sun, fresh air
and water (balneotherapy, thalassotherapy, heliotherapy), Yoga,
Tai Chi.
- Healthy food — moderation with
alcohol, meat, tobacco, drugs; seeking out
health foods and adopting healthy eating to prevent obesity. This can extend to teetotalism and Vegetarian or Vegan eating
habits. The latter two also interface with having respect for the
environment.
- Agriculture — avoiding unnecessary fertilisers and genetically modified
organisms. Against factory
farming
- Medicine — should be natural if not entirely homeopathic
- Psychotherapy — as a way of
effecting personal changes
- Rapport with other humans — equality and respect. An anti-war,
pro-world government stance
- Pedagogy — children should be respected
as equals instead of being patronised
- Spirituality — man is no more than
an animal, and nudity has a place in
religion.
- Dress — nudism, as clothes are unnecessary, unheathly and build
social barriers.
- Sports — to develop a healthy body.
- Arts — should be to develop individual
talents, not as a means of financial exploitation
- Tourism — to understand other peoples'
culture, concentrating on camping to remain close to the
earth.
- Liberty — no one has the right to tell
others or their children that they must wear clothes.
- Pollution — less clothing to
manufacture and maintain means lower carbon footprint.
Some of these ideas have become mainstream. Others have been
quietly forgotten. It is generally agreed among naturists that
erotism and blatant sexuality have no place
in naturism and are, in fact, antithetical to its ideals.
Naturism and the Romantics
Walt Whitman American writer, A
Sun-bathed Nakedness:
Henry David Thoreau,
In
wildness is the preservation of the world.,
Walking:
Naturism was part of a literary movement in the
late 1800s (see the writings of
André
Gide) which also influenced the art movements of the time
specifically
Henri Matisse and other
Fauve painters. This movement was based on the
French concept of
joie de vivre, the
idea of revelling freely in physical sensations and direct
experiences and a spontaneous approach to life. Later this movement
became called
Naturalism.
Naturism for health
German naturism came from the
Lebensreform movement.
The Wandervogel youth movement of 1896, from
Steglitz
, Berlin
, promoted
ideas of fitness and vigour inspired by thoughts of nationalism,
rebelling against the thoughts of their parents. At the same
time doctors of the
Natural
Healing Movement were using
heliotherapy, treating diseases such as
TB,
rheumatism and
scrofula with exposure to sunlight.
(
Sunlight has been shown to be beneficial
in some skin conditions and enables the body to make
vitamin D).
- Arnold Rickli.
a Swiss doctor opened in 1853, light bathing clinic in Slovenian
town Bled
.
- Heinrich Pudor wrote on
methods to improve social hygiene in his book Nackende Menchen
und Jauchzen der Zukunft (Naked people and the future of
Mankind) and then Nacktkultur (The cult of the nude). It
prescribes an austere lifestyle and nudity.
- Paul Zimmermann, opened the
Freilicht Park in Lübeck which was open to those who subscribed to
Nacktkultur principles.
- Richard Ungewitter wrote
Die Nacktheit (Nakedness) which sold 90,000 copies, prescribed a
similar Utopian lifestyle, where everyone would be nude, eat only
vegetables and abstain from alcohol and tobacco. In his Utopia,
everyone was to be Germanic with blue eyes and blonde hair.
- Adolf Koch, a left wing primary
school teacher, sought to use social nudity to free the people from
'authority fixated conditioning which held proletarians in
deference of their masters: parental authority, paternalism of the
church, the mass media and organs of law and order. He used
Organic-Rhythmic exercises in Berlin schools in the 1920s. In 1932
there were about 100,000 Germans involved with Naturism, of which
70,000 were in Koch's Körperschülen schools.
- Werner Zimmermann, a
Swiss, preached against body guilt and encouraged naked education.
He sought to eliminate body guilt and encourage openness and end
the repression of the human spirit,which he saw as the cause of
sexual deviation.
- Hans Surén
taught nude gymnastics to soldiers for five years, and on being
forced to leave the army, he wrote in 1924, Mensch und die
Sonne (Men and the Sun) which ran to 61 reprints. Later, in
1936, Surén proposed physical exercise and naturism as a means of
creating a pure German race and of beauty. In the early 1940s he
was out of favour and arrested. By 1945, he had turned full circle
and was writing religious texts. Though never a member of any FKK
club he was awarded honorary membership of the DFK in
1952.
- Nudists became a large element in German Left Wing Politics.
The Proletarische Freikörperkulturbewegung subsection of
the Workers Sports Organisation had 60000 members.
With the increased awareness of
skin
cancer, wearing of
sunscreen is now
part of the culture.
Naturism and equality
Many people say that being nude in groups makes them feel more
accepted for their entire being — physical, intellectual and
emotional. They say that they tend to be more accepted, in spite of
differences in age, body shape, fitness, and health. Without
clothing, one's social rank is generally obscured. They report
feeling more united with humanity, with less regard to a person's
wealth, position, nationality, race, and sex.Discussed in:
History of social nudity
Max Koch,
Freilicht, 1897.
Nudity in social contexts has been practised in various forms by
many
cultures at all time periods. Social
nudity is most frequently encountered in the contexts of
bathing, swimming and in
saunas, whether in single-sex groups, within the
family or with mixed-sex friends.
It is difficult to nominate exactly when naturism started as a
movement. In 1903 Paul Zimmermann opened the first club,
Freilichtpark, near Hamburg. By 1951, the national
federations united to form the
International Naturist
Federation or
INF. Some naturists
preferred not to join clubs, and after 1945, pressure was put to
designate beaches for naturist use. The two groups did not
cooperate until 2000.
In the twenty-first century, with changing leisure patterns,
commercial organisations began opening holiday resorts to attract
naturists who expected a standard of comfort and amenity equal to,
or exceeding, that found at textilist resorts.
Historical era
See main article Nudity in
History
The spread of philosophy and the rise of formal
communities
The
earliest known naturist club in the "western" sense of the word was
established in British India
in
1891. It was founded by Charles Edward Gordon Crawford, a
widower, who was a District and Sessions Judge for the Bombay Civil
Service at Thana. Evidence for its existence is only known by a few
letters he sent to friends, and the club which had three members,
reportedly closed in 1892.
In the
early 1900s, a series of philosophical papers was published in
Germany
. Dr.
Heinrich Pudor, under the
pseudonym Heinrich Scham, wrote a book titled
Nacktkultur,
which discussed the benefits of nudity in co-education and
advocated participating in sports while being free of cumbersome
clothing.
Richard Ungewitter
(
Nacktheit, 1906,
Nackt, 1908, etc.) proposed
that combining physical fitness, sunlight, and fresh air bathing,
and then adding the nudist philosophy, contributed to mental and
psychological fitness, good health, and an improved moral-life
view.
The wide publication of those papers and others, contributed to an
explosive worldwide growth of nudism, in which nudists participated
in various social, recreational, and physical fitness activities in
the nude.
The first known organized club for nudists,
Freilichtpark (Free-Light Park), was opened near Hamburg
in 1903 by Paul
Zimmerman.
Germany
See also: Freikörperkultur
The nudist movement gained prominence in Germany in the 1920s, but
was suppressed during the
Nazi Gleichschaltung after
Adolf Hitler came to power. The
state-controlled leisure organization of the Nazis,
Kraft durch Freude, refused to recognize
it. However, it was later discovered that
Luftwaffe (Air Force) head
Hermann Göring had single-handedly
written his own strict anti-nudity views into the
Gleichschaltung, thereby imposing his views on everyone
(he had been one of its main authors). Many in the Nazi party
thought he had gone too far, so after nearly a decade, the rules
were eventually softened in July 1942. Nevertheless, all naturism
clubs had to register with Kraft durch Freude, which meant
excluding
Jews and
Communists. Also, they had to keep all activities
well out in the countryside so there would be virtually no chance
of being seen by others.
After the
war, East
Germans
enjoyed nudism as one the few freedoms they had
under the communist government, chiefly at beaches rather than
clubs (private organizations being regarded as potentially
subversive by the regime). It quickly rebounded in the west
also, and today, united Germany
has many
clubs, parks and beaches for nudism.Since
German reunification, however, nudity
is said to have become rare at some locations in the former eastern
zone.
Vacationing in Mediterranean
France
at the large
Cap
d'Agde
resort also became popular for Germans when it
opened in the late 1960s, and Germans are typically the most
commonly-seen foreigners at nude beaches all around
Europe.
France
From 1857
Dr. Duhamel spoke of the importance of heliotherapy, and worked with children
suffering from tuberculosis on the
beach at Berck
. In
1903 S. Gay created a naturist community at Bois-Fourgon.
In 1907,
supported by his superiors, Abbé Legrée encouraged the students at
his catholic college to bathe nude on the rocky beaches near
Marseille
. A report on German naturism was published
in la
Revue des deux
mondes.
Marcel Kienné de Mongeot, who came from a noble family and who was
an aviator in the
Great War, is credited
with starting naturism in France in 1920. By then he was a
journalist who wrote a defense of the dancer, Malkowski, in the
journal
Vouloir. His family had suffered from
tuberculosis, and he saw naturism as a cure and a continuation of
the traditions of the ancient Greeks.
In 1926, he started
the magazine Vivre intégralement (later called
Vivre) and the first French naturist club, Sparta
Club at Garambouville, near Evreux
.
Others quickly followed as did local opposition. His victory in
court established that nudism was legal on private property that
was fenced and screened.
Drs.
André and Gaston Durville opened a naturist
health centre, edited the La vie sage (1924) and bought a
70 hectare site on the Île du Levant
on which they established the Héliopolis
. The village was open to the public. Dr
François Fougerat de David de Lastours, who was gassed in the Great
War and was saved by exposure to the sun, in 1925 wrote a thesis on
heliotherapy and in that year opened
the
Club gymnique de France. Jacque de Marquette wrote on
naturism and vegetarianism. In 1936, government minister
Léo Lagrange recognised the naturist
movement.
Albert and Christine Lecocq were active members of many of these
clubs, but after disagreements left and in 1944 founded their own
travel club
Club du Soleil. It was popular and had members
in 84 cities, becoming the worlds largest naturist club. In 1948
they founded the
FFN.
In 1949
they started a magazine, Vie au Soleil and in 1950 they
opened the CHM-Montalivet
at Montalivet
, the worlds first naturist holiday centre.
In 1951 they assisted in the formation of the
INF.
The
Quartier
Naturiste at Agde
opened
offering a different form of social nudity. In 1975, Euronat
, the largest holiday centre (335ha) opened
10 km north of Montalivet
which was running at capacity. In 1983 the
FFN was accepted as an official tourist and youth movement. SOCNAT
provided the management and financial stability to the movement and
runs 5 centres in France and one in Spain. Holiday centres started
to form cooperative marketing groups and aim for 5 star status.
Publicity material was of a quality indistinguishable from textile
holiday companies.
In this benign climate,
Randonue, an
unauthorised form of
naturisme sauvage has become popular,
and areas traditionally known for discreet sunbathing have been
revisited. Naturist is accepted and can even be practised on many
popular textilist beaches.
As of 2007, France has 150 members clubs offering holiday
accommodation, 50 holiday centres, official naturist beaches,
unofficial beaches and many homes where naturist swimming and
sunbathing is normal. Naturism employs more than 3000 people, and
is estimated to be worth 250 million Euro to the French economy.
France is represented on the
INF by the
FFN.
Poland
First
reported naturist society was established in 1897 in Grudziądz
. In pre-war and post-war Poland
naturism was
practiced in closed and selucted areas. Reported places for
naturism were Zaleszczyki
(in todays Ukraine
) and Otwock
.
Under the
communism regime, Poland's naturism became
unofficial and was practiced mostly by the artistic boheme near
Krynica
Morska
, Międzyzdroje
and Dębki.
In the early
1980s naturism became popular
mostly due to increased interest in
media.
As the pop song
"Chałupy Welcome To" (about the naturist beach in Chałupy,
featuring beach nudity in the clip) became the 1985 summer hit in Poland,
the nude seaside locations like Chałupy
or Rowy became known to an
average Polish sunbather. Polish Naturist Society was formed
and after the number of
lawsuits naturism
became tolerated in selected "unofficial" beaches and distant
spots.
In today's Poland naturism is practiced in number of the seaside
and inland beaches. The most of Polish beaches are actually
clothes-optional rather than naturist.
Among the
most popular locations are Międzydroje-Lubiewo
, Grzybowo, Rowy
, Dębki, Gdańsk-Stogi
and Piaski. The most popular inland locations include
Warsaw
(Wał
Miedzeszyński), Kazimierz Dolny and Kryspinów near Kraków
. In the winter season, naturism is practiced
by organized groups in Warsaw
and
Tri-City. Public naturist
events are held bi-monthly in Poznań-Koziegłowy
and Łódź
waterpark.
United Kingdom
In the
United
Kingdom
, the first nudist club was established in Wickford
, Essex in 1924.
According to Michael Farrar, writing for
British Naturism the club adopted the name
"Moonella Group" from the name of the owner of the ground,
Moonella, and called its site
The
Camp. Moonella, who was still living in 1965 but whose
identity remains to be discovered, had inherited a house with land
in 1923 and made it available to certain members of the
New Gymnosophy Society. This society
had been founded a few years before by H.C. Booth, M.H. Sorensen
and Rex Wellbye under the name of the
English Gymnosophical Society.
It met
for discussions at the Minerva Cafe at 144
High
Holborn
in London, the headquarters of the Women's Freedom League. Those
who were permitted to join the Moonella Group were carefully
selected, and the club was run by an "aristocracy" of the original
members, all of whom had "club names" to preserve their anonymity.
The club closed in 1926 because of building on adjacent land.
By 1943 there were a number of these so-called "sun clubs" and
together they formed the
British Sunbathers
Association or BSBA. In 1954 a group of clubs unhappy with the
way the BSBA was being run split off to form the Federation of
British Sun Clubs or FBSC. These two organisations rivalled each
other for a while before eventually coming together again in 1964
as the
Central Council for British
Naturism or
CCBN. This
organisation has remained much the same but is now more commonly
known simply as
British Naturism or
BN.
In 1961, the BSBA Annual Conference agreed that the term nudist was
inappropriate and should be discarded in favour of naturist.
The first
official naturist beach was opened at Fairlight Cove
, Fairlight
Glen
near Hastings
in 1978, the beaches at Brighton
and Fraisthorpe
, Bridlington
opened in April 1980.
United States
In the
United
States
, German immigrant Kurt
Barthel organized the first nudist event in 1929 in the woods
just outside of New York
City
(NYC) and founded the American League for Physical
Culture (ALPC). In 1931, the Christian naturism movement under the
leadership of former New
Jersey
Dutch Reformed
minister Ilsley Boone became the first
naturism movement in the United States. Initially, Boone was
vice president of the American League
for Physical Culture but by October 1931 became
president. In 1939 Boone renamed the club as the
American Sunbathing
Association (ASA). Naturism began expanding nationwide. To
create a family atmosphere at nudism venues, Boone insisted that
alcohol be prohibited at all
member clubs. Social nudism in the form of private clubs and
campgrounds began appearing in the 1930s.
Rock Lodge
Club
, about 40 miles (65 km) from New York City in
Stockholm, New Jersey, started in 1932 and is still in operation
today. Elsewhere in the United States, a 1935
advertisement claims Sea Island Sanctuary, South
Carolina
, was the
"largest and oldest" resort where nudism
could be practiced year-round. Nudism first began
appearing on the west coast of the U.S. and Canada
about
1939. In that year, the first club in Canada, the Van Tan
Club, formed and continues today in North Vancouver, BC.
Kaniksu Ranch, about 45 miles
(70 km) north of Spokane, Washington
, opened the same year and is still in
operation.
According to the
Federation of Canadian
Naturists history and the Lupin Naturist Club history, Boone
was toppled in 1951 by members dissatisfied with his autocratic
style. This, together with Boone's desire to open a new club closer
to NYC than others had wanted, led him to form the National Nudist
Council. After Boone's passing in the 1960s, the ASA became more
secular, along with
American society in
general.
In 1980
The Naturist Society
(TNS) was founded by
Lee Baxandall as
a successor to the
Free Beach Movement.
The emphasis of TNS is on nudity in public locations rather than on
private premises, though it also sponsors several annual gatherings
held at private resorts.
In 1995, the ASA was renamed as the
American Association
for Nude Recreation (AANR). The AANR represents over 270 clubs
and resorts, and is the US representative on the INF.
The AANR currently
has its headquarters in Florida
.
AANR consists of the seven regions: AANR-East, AANR-Florida,
AANR-Midwest,
AANR-Northwest, AANR-Southwest, AANR-West and
AANR-Western Canada.
With the beginning of the modern
internet
in the mid-1990s,
Christian
Naturism became much more organized in the U.S. than ever
before. Annual
Christian Nudist Convocations began early in the
decade of the 2000s.
In 2009, a groundbreaking campaign to promote Nudism in the United
States occurred with an effort by AANR to record the largest
simultaneous Skinny Dip at several U.S. Clubs and beaches, coming
on July 11 of the year. Some states and jurisdictions reported the
first mainstream nudist events of their kind; one of the largest
Cities with no AANR nudist club until very recently, Baltimore
City, Maryland saw such a mass nudist effort successfully organized
by Maryland Area Naturist Association, better known as
"MARNA"
Currently, only two nudist or naturist magazines are still
published in the United States --
N magazine from The
Naturist Society, and
Naturally magazine from
Internaturally. Both are published quarterly espousing the virtues
of nude living and recreation.
N magazine is more activist
oriented, while
Naturally focuses on travel opportunities
and individual nudist experiences.
Canada
In
Canada
, individuals around the country became interested
in nudism, skinny-dipping, and physical culture in the early part
of the 20th century. After 1940 they had their own Canadian
magazine,
Sunbathing & Health, which occasionally
carried local news. Canadians had scattered groups in several
cities during the 1930s and 1940s, and some of these groups
attracted enough interest to form clubs on private land. The most
significant clubs were the Van Tan Club and, in Ontario, the Sun
Air Club.
Canadians who served in the military during the Second World War
met like-minded souls from across the country, and often visited
clubs while in Europe. They were a ready pool of recruits for
post-war organizers. A few years later the wave of post-war
immigration brought many Europeans with their own extensive
experience, and they not only swelled the ranks of membership, but
often formed their own clubs, helping to expand nudism from coast
to coast.
Most of those clubs united in the Canadian Sunbathing Association,
which affiliated with the American Sunbathing Association in 1954.
Several disagreements between eastern and western members of the
CSA resulted in the breakup of CSA into the Western Canadian
Sunbathing Association (WCSA) and the Eastern Canadian Sunbathing
Association (ECSA) in 1960. The ECSA endured much in-fighting over
the next decade and a half, leading to its official demise in 1978.
The WCSA continues today as the Western Canadian Association for
Nude Recreation (WCANR), a region of the
American Association
for Nude Recreation (AANR) which itself was formerly known as
the ASA.
In 1977
the Fédération
québécoise de naturisme (FQN) was founded in Québec, by Michel
Vaïs, who had experienced European naturism at Montalivet
. In 1985 the
Federation of Canadian
Naturists (FCN) was formed with the support of the FQN. In 1988
the FQN and FCN formed the FCN-FQN Union as the official Canadian
representative in the
International Naturist
Federation (INF).
Free beaches
Many people get their first exposure to the clothes free movement
through an informal approach (e.g. a
clothing optional beach, a friend's place in
the woods, a party on the shore or
skinny
dipping).
Naturism and sports
A
naturist race takes place every year in the semi-naturist beach of Barinatxe, in the
town of Sopelana
, near Bilbao
, in
northern Spain
.
World Day of Naturism
The
International
Naturist Federation identifies the first Sunday of June as
World Day of Naturism. In this day the naturist
associations organize some events to publicize the naturist
philosophy.
Festival naturism
From
Woodstock
to Edinburgh, and
Nambassa 1981 in the southern hemisphere
communal nudity is commonly recorded at music
festivals.
Demographics
- In 1999 the Federation of Canadian
Naturists commissioned a national survey on Canadian attitudes
towards nudity which found that 8.9% of Canadian have or would
visit a naturist facility. A further 11.6% have or would go skinny
dipping in mixed company; that 39% go naked in their own homes;
that naturists tend to have above average incomes; that urban
dwellers are more likely to be naturist than country dwellers; and
that the under 25s are the most likely to be naturists.
- In 1983 the Naturist Society in the United States sponsored a
Gallup poll, which was repeated in 2000, which found the
following:
USA: 1983/2000 Gallup poll
| Year |
1983 |
2000 |
| Question |
Yes |
No |
Yes |
No |
| Do you believe that people who enjoy nude sunbathing should be
able to do so without interference from officials as long as they
do so at a beach that is accepted for that purpose? |
72 |
24 |
80 |
17 |
| Local and state governments now set aside public land for
special types of recreation such as snowmobiling, surfing and
hunting. Do you think special and secluded areas should be set
aside for people who enjoy nude sunbathing? |
39 |
54 |
48 |
48 |
| Have you, personally, ever gone "skinny dipping" or nude
sunbathing in a mixed group of men and women at a beach, at a pool,
or somewhere else? |
15 |
83 |
25 |
73 |
- In 2005 the British CCBN commissioned a survey of members,
which found that, among British people:
How we (British people) discovered
naturism:
| Beach abroad |
29% |
| Beach in UK |
20% |
| Newspaper |
15% |
| Friend |
9% |
| Parents |
8% |
| Conviction |
6% |
| TV/Radio |
5% |
| The Web |
3% |
| H&E |
3% |
| Other |
2% |
Ever been member of a club?
| Yes |
58.5% |
| No |
41.5% |
Do you use UK naturist beaches?
| Often |
22.4% |
| Sometimes |
40.1% |
| Rarely |
18.7% |
| Never |
18.7% |
If you use a naturist holiday facility
abroad:
| Self-catering |
58.5% |
| Hotel |
41.5% |
| Own Tent |
12.7% |
| Hire Caravan |
10% |
| Own Caravan |
8.7% |
| Bed and Breakfast |
6.6% |
| Friends |
4.4% |
| Motor home |
4.2% |
| Own accommodation |
3.1% |
| Hire Tent |
2.4% |
| Other |
3.3% |
Issues in social nudity
- See Issues in social
nudity
Naturism addresses, challenges and explores a myriad of sometimes
taboo subjects: stereotypes and mores relating
to the nude appearance of the human body, mixed gender nudity,
personal space, human sexuality, gymnophobia,
modesty, physical attractiveness,
vanity,
objectification,
exploitation and
consent. It can thus be controversial.
Problems for the naturist community
Any social group is said to go through four phases:
Forming, Storming, Norming,
Performing, wrote
Bruce Tuckman in
1965. In this context we can understand some of the current
pressures on various aspects of
Naturism :
- Naturist club isolation- established clubs
excluding new members and rejecting new ideas.
- A family movement in a time of social change -
a change in needs and expectations, away from one of a permanent
commitment towards one of change and choice.
- Multi-gen preferences- each generation is a
specific social group which needs to have its own norms that are
consistent with common rules.
- Clubs vs Holiday Centres- organizations with
different roots find it difficult to establish common rules. The
contention between those espousing a year round commitment to an
ideal, and those who see it as summer-only recreation. Club
naturism is declining, while the number of people that assume
naturist facilities will be available at any holiday resort is
rising. The number of users of free beaches may exceed the number
of people who wish to join a club.
- Paid staff and volunteers- many clubs were
established as cooperatives, but the values change when a few
members put in the capital or work needed. This became more
difficult when some members were paid to act as site managers.
- Infiltration by other groups- for many years
clubs had strict "No singles" policies to maintain the family
nature of the club. Many other social groups practice non-family
nudism, whether it be social singles, gay
naturists or swingers.
- Exhibitionists and voyeurs- as unwelcome in a
naturist community as in a clothed community.
- Naturist Media- family naturist groups with
concerns of associations with the publishers of Naturist/ Nudist
publications and DVDs.
- Teen Nudist summer camps- an example of a
movement that some social-advocacy groups believe is growing too
fast.
- Non-conformist naturists- primarily outside
the club scene, though they also visit clubs occasionally.
Naturist and nudist magazines
Nudist and naturist magazines can be categorised in four ways.
- Magazines published by an official national
organisation, such as BN (CCBN), Going
Natural / Au naturel (FCN/FQN),
Nude & Natural Magazine TNS.
- Magazines that are published for naturists
such as Naturally.
- Independent magazines, such as Health and Efficiency, that claim
to be naturist but still print a significantly larger percentage of
pictures of young female professional models. However, they do
carry naturist columns (such as Sunny Trails in
Sunbathing for Health) and advertisements for genuine
naturist clubs and societies when no other newspaper would include
these. Many clubs and groups were indebted to them for that.
- Magazines that print photographs only of young female
professional models, which are disapproved of by naturists
and their opponents alike.
This has been a dilemma for naturists, who needed the small amount
of editorial content in some magazines while thoroughly
disapproving of the photographic content. Writers who produced copy
for these magazines are not respected by many naturists though
often quoted as authoritative sources by the news media.
Naturist clubs were willing to allow filming by the media on their
grounds, though the content that proved not to be of genuine
naturism ended up being parodied by the media as the norm.
Analysis of the
Internet shows the trends.
Naturist and nudist websites show that pages fall into the same
categories. There are many pages displaying explicit and even
pornographic images, which are totally alien to the naturist ideal,
that use the word "naturist" or "naturism" on their pages and
metatags. These are then harvested by media journalists or
pro-censorship campaigners to create a false image of
naturism.
Today there are high quality naturist magazines in many European
countries that reflect the gender and age groups found at clubs and
resorts.
Criticism
Descamps assembles a list of criticisms of naturism: it is too
cold; normal bodies look ugly—it is only for the physically
beautiful; it is too embarrassing; it is against the laws of
nature, against the law, or against religion; "nudism makes me
think of sex"; it is for primitive people or animals.
Most popular criticisms for naturism arise from:
- situations of accurate usage of the term, criticisms of
situations where naturists and non-naturists would share the same
concerns. For example, naturism is often added as a tag to
titillating websites that have naturist content.
- criticisms of activitites which are imagined to be naturist by
a writer who has not researched it in the relevant libraries.
Naturism can sometimes contain aspects of eroticism, although the
debate about this is often simplified and seen negatively in the
media and the public mind and by many modern naturists and naturist
organisations. Historically the experience and discussion of erotic
feelings during naturist activities such as dance and gymnastics
played an important part in early Germanic naturism and formed part
of its 'positive' connection with nature. However, it was when
naturism arrived in the more sexually conservative cultures of the
UK and USA that the expression and discussion of eroticism within
naturism became frowned upon. Recent research has begun to explore
this complex and historical relationship while highlighting how
erotic experiences within naturism may actually enhance sexual
wellbeing and be a positive force within naturism.
See also
References
Notes
- See 2002–2003 World Naturist Handbook, pub International
Naturist Federation INF-FNI, Sint Hubertusstraat, B-2600
Berchem(Antwerpen) ISBN 9055838330 The Agde definition. The INF is
made up of representative of the Naturist Organisations in 32
countries, with 7 more having correspondent status. The current
edition is * Naturisme, The INF World Handbook (2006)
[1]
ISBN 90-5062-080-9
- http://www.inf-fni.org/index_e.htm| INF web page
- Smith and King (2009), pp. 439-446.
- "Le naturisme est la doctrine qui consiste à laisser agir la
nature plutot que d'intervenir de manière artificielle". Dr Jean
Baptiste Luc Planchon (1734-1781) Il sera publié en 1778 sous le
titre :Le Naturisme ou la nature considérée dans les maladies et
leur traitement conforme à la doctrine et à la pratique
d'Hippocrate et ses sectateurs".
- 2002-2003 World Naturist Handbook, pub International Naturist
Federation INF-FNI, Sint Hubertusstraat, B-2600 Berchem(Antwerpen)
ISBN 9055838330 The Agde definition. The INF is made up of
representative of the Naturist Organisations in 32 countries, with
7 more having correspondent status.
- The Hannover based Bund für freies Lebensgestaltung
Hannover wrote "Naturism is a new lifestyle caring for the body,
the soul and the spirit in society.We live the ideal of freedom,
conscious of its limits, taking up our responsibility. The
expression of our will is nudity, our admission of sincerity. In
2002–2003 World Guide as above.
- Montana Naturist website
- In his book, Cinema Au Naturel (Introduction on page
11), author Mark
Storey states "two related terms that we will continually run
across are nudist and naturist. Although, the
meanings of the two terms are virtually identical, they often have
different connotations for those who prefer one to the other. In
America people who believe that it is physically, socially,
emotionally, and perhaps spiritually healthy to go about fully nude
individually and in groups of mixed sex whenever weather permits
and others are not offended generally refer to themselves as
"nudists". In Europe such people more often than not refer to
themselves as "naturists."
- 1996-1997 World Naturist Handbook, pub International Naturist
Federation INF-FNI, Sint Hubertusstraat, B-2600 Berchem(Antwerpen)
ISBN 9067168335 Here the English version of the Agde definition was
translated differently. Naturism (American "nudism") is a way
of life in harmony with nature characterised by the practice of
communal nudity with the intention of encouraging self-respect,
respect for others and the environment.
- Presently, Mark
Storey is authoring an article detailing historical use of the
terms naturism and nudism and how they differ between different
cultures, countries, and time periods in history. In a telephone
interview by Daniel Johnson on 15 Apr 2006 with Storey he stated
that "a draft of the piece was posted on the "References" page of
the The Naturist Society web site for a few
weeks". At the time of its former release in October 2004 it was
titled Naturism, Nudism, or Nameless? A History of Terms
He is planning on publishing a revised article as soon as
additional information and errors are corrected.
- Ray Connett, Sunny Trails, in Sunbathing for Health Sept 1947 p
8, July 1957 p 14 writes that Naturism is a weasel word that can
mean anything
- Histoire de Montalivet et des Naturistes du Medoc, Marc-Alain
Deschamps, pub. Editions Publimag ISBN 2-952420-0-4
- Au naturel, the History of Nudism in Canada, James Woycke Ph.D,
pub 2003, Federation of Canadian Naturists, ISBN 0-9682332-3-6
- The three biggest Centres on the Medoc are Euronat 335ha, CHM
175ha with a 3km beach, and La Jenny 127ha
- [2]
- a
relaxed explanation
- AANR John Kinman refers to ten beaches
- [3]
- [4]
- In October 2006, the party was dissolved, as announced by party
Secretary and parliamentary candidate Sylvia Else: "NLP winding up." (Topic), in aus.culture.naturist
at Google Groups
- * Jim Hamm Productions Limited Spirit Wrestlers, a
2002 documentary video and DVD about the Russian Christian sect
called Freedomite Doukhobors,
- http://www.figleafforum.com/resources_genesis.html "What Do The
First Three Chapters Of Genesis Teach About Clothing?" by Ian B.
Johnson, Fig Leaf Fourm (note: articles such as this one are peer
reviewed)
- (see Gill Perry's writing on The Decorative, The Expressive and
The Primitive in Primitivism, Cubism, Abstraction: The Early Twentieth Century)
- :fr:Naturisme
- Local knowledge
- Freikörperkultur Geschichte
- Vivre Nu: Psychosociologie du Naturisme, Marc-Alain Descamps,
Edition Trismégiste, 1987, ISBN 2-86509-026-4
- French
wikipedia
- The History of Social Nudism - Nudist History
- History of Naturism
- Body Acceptance: A Brief History of Social Nudity
- Roberts v. Clement
- Exposed and stark naked -- on purpose,Kathy George,
Seattle Post-Intelligencer
2003-04-07 accessed 15/01/2008
- :: The Sopelana Naturist Race ::
- and two next issue.
- gives a history of naturism, written in a personal style that
attempts to use this type of humour.
Further reading
- Lee Baxandall's World Guide to Nude Beaches & Resorts:
New for the '90s (1997) [3513]
ISBN 0-934106-21-5
- No Shoes, No Shirt, No Worries Article on
"nakations" in The New York Times
- Naked Places, A Guide for Gay Men to Nude Recreation and
Travel (2006) [3514] ISBN 0-9656089-4-8
- The Canadian Guide to Naturist Resorts & Beaches
(2000) [3515] ISBN 0-9682332-2-8
- North American Guide to Nude Recreation (2002)
[3516] ISBN
1-882033-09-4
- Bare Beaches (2004) [3517] ISBN
0-9544767-1-9
- Storey, Mark Social Nudity,
Sexual Attraction, and Respect Nude & Natural magazine, 24.3 Spring
2005.
- Storey, Mark Children, Social
Nudity and Academic Research Nude & Natural magazine, 23.4 Summer
2004.
- The Complete Guide To Nudism And Naturism (2006)
[3518]
ISBN 1846852587 ISBN 978-1846852589
- Smith, G.; King, M. (2009). Naturism and sexuality: Broadening
our approach to sexual wellbeing, Health and Place. Vol 15, Issue 2, June 2009.
External links