Download Free Male Nude Photography The Body Guards Book in PDF and EPUB Free Download. You can read online Male Nude Photography The Body Guards and write the review.

Portraits of the 16 Body Guards. Las Vegas men who you would typically see as security guards. Ranging from the very big and built, to the strong guy next door. In addition, each has their own photo book, as well as DVD of live video from their photo shoot. In cooperation with MJ Photography, Las Vegas.
Male Nude Photography book. Intimate moments behind the scenes of Bryan Valley's 1st nude photo shoot. Full frontal male nudity, color, 50 pages. Bryan aspires to be a Fitness Model in National Fitness and Nutrition Publications. He trains 7 days a week, and his physique shows it! Bryan is one of The Next Body Guards, and the video DVD of his 1st nude photo shoot is also available.
Male Nude Photography book. Intimate moments from Matt Prince's 1st nude photo shoot. Full frontal male nudity, color photographs and digital stills from DVD video, 46 pages. Matt Prince is 23 years old, and this is his first photo shoot and first nude experience ever. Exotic look, great blue eyes. Aspires to be a reality TV personality. Has moved to LA and auditions for all those VH1 and MTV series. Matt is one of The Next Body Guards, and the video DVD of his 1st nude photo shoot is also available.
Male Nude Photography book. Intimate moments from Tom Browne's 1st nude photo shoot. Full frontal male nudity, color photographs and digital stills from the DVD video, 44 pages. Tom Browne is a former Playgirl model, also appearing in multiple gay publications like Black Inches, Black Meat, as well as straight adult films under his porn name "Rod Diesel". A former ASAF Mechanic, he also is a Male Escort. Tom is one of The Next Body Guards, and the video DVD of his 1st nude photo shoot is also available.
Male Nude Photography book. Intimate moments from Nick Parris's 1st nude photo shoot. Full frontal male nudity, color photographs plus digital stills from the DVD video, 46 pages. Nick Parris is 19 years old, and a full time college student. He was born and raised in France until age of 12 years old, then moved the USA. A typical 19 year old guy, he loves to party, hang with his friends at Strip Clubs, and date the sorority girls at school. Nick is one of The Next Body Guards, and the video DVD of his 1st nude photo shoot is also available.
It's time for Wolfman Jaxx first nude photo shoot. Combine behind the scenes preparation, with the patio and shower location scenes, complete with tight underwear and nude. Full frontal male nudity, color.
"Examining this innovative collaboration as a turning point in the history of photography and in queer American culture. Body Language is the first in-depth study of the extraordinary interplay between photographer George Platt Lynes and PaJaMa (painters Paul Cadmus, Jared French, and Margaret Hoening French). These enigmatic photographs--issuing from intimate private networks and queer sexualities--helped ground friendships and also found their way into the public worlds of fashion and fame. Nick Mauss and Angela Miller offer timely readings of how practices of staging, collaboration, and psychological enactment through the body arced across the boundaries of art and life, private and public worlds, anticipating contemporary social media. For these audacious artists, the camera was used not to capture, but to actively perform. Renouncing photography's conventional role as mirror of the real, Lynes and PaJaMa energized forms of worldmaking via a new social framing of the self"--
Although nudity is something that everyone has experience with, public nudity is still largely considered taboo. Public Nudity and the Rhetoric of the Body examines instances of public nudity where sexuality is at the forefront of public body display. It presents a range of case studies: the legal aspects of sexualized public nudity as it relates to communication theory and the First Amendment; the controversies surrounding the work of photographer Jock Sturges; the public performance art of Milo Moiré; the topless protests of FEMEN; the social media activism of Aliaa Magda Elmahdy; the ritualized flashing during Mardi Gras in New Orleans; and the sexual displays of Folsom Street Fair, the largest leather pride festival. Taken together, these cases teach much about identity, self-determination, and sexuality, and illustrate the complicated rhetorical nature of the human body in the public sphere.
Managing the Body explores the emergence of modern male and female bodies within the context of debates about racial fitness and active citizenship in Britain from the 1880s until 1939. It analyses the growing popularity of hygienic regimen or body management such as dietary restrictions, exercise, sunbathing, dress reform, and birth control to cultivate beauty, health, and fitness. These bodily disciplines were advocated by a loosely connected group of life reform and physical culture promoters, doctors, and public health campaigners against the background of rapid urbanization, the rise of modern lifestyles, a proliferation of visual images of beautiful bodies, and eugenicist fears about racial degeneration. The author shows that body management was an essential aspect of the campaign for national efficiency before 1914. The modern nation state needed physically efficient, disciplined citizens and the promotion of hygienic practices was an integral component of the Edwardian welfare reforms. Anxieties about physical deterioration persisted after the First World War, as demonstrated by the launch of new pressure groups that aimed to transform Britain from a C3 to an A1 nation. These military categories became a recurrent metaphor throughout the interwar years and the virtuous habits of the healthy and fit A1 citizen were juxtaposed with those of the C3 anti-citizen, whose undisciplined lifestyle was attributed to ignorance and lack of self-control. Practices such as vegetarianism, nudism, and men's dress reform were utopian and appealed only to a small minority, but sunbathing, hiking, and keep-fit classes became mainstream activities and they were promoted in the National Government's 'National Fitness Campaign' of the late 1930s.