Why the Pain, What's the Gain? (e-bog) af Kunitz, Daniel
Kunitz, Daniel (forfatter)

Why the Pain, What's the Gain? e-bog

101,83 DKK (inkl. moms 127,29 DKK)
Running, jumping, lifting, pushing, stretching our bodies are naturally built to move and work, strengthen and adapt. Yet the gym is a 20th century phenomenon and working outa concept that has produced one of the worlds biggest industries: fitness. An industry whose changing ideals reflect societys cultural shifts on what it means to be fit, and how to have the perfect physique.Why the Pain? W...
E-bog 101,83 DKK
Forfattere Kunitz, Daniel (forfatter)
Forlag Aurum
Udgivet 24 marts 2016
Længde 288 sider
Genrer Fitness and diet
Sprog English
Format epub
Beskyttelse LCP
ISBN 9781781316108
Running, jumping, lifting, pushing, stretching our bodies are naturally built to move and work, strengthen and adapt. Yet the gym is a 20th century phenomenon and working outa concept that has produced one of the worlds biggest industries: fitness. An industry whose changing ideals reflect societys cultural shifts on what it means to be fit, and how to have the perfect physique.Why the Pain? Whats the Gain?takes you on a guided tour of humankinds 3000-year wayward search for the perfect workout; from the dirt courtyards of the ancient Greek gymnasium to the birth of the modern gym in 19th-century Paris; to the weekend, beachside Olympic-caliber gymnasts of Santa Monica and Sydney. Daniel Kunitz seeks the answer to a simple yet profound question: Why do we work out?We will listen in on the innovators and charlatans who lifted the multibillion-dollar business of gym-fitness into being. We will learn how the womens movement sparked an enormous exercise boom and tell the story not only of how we arrived at the big-box gym era but also of the last decades acceleration into a new fitness frontier.Daniel Kunitz puts himself through the grit and pain of the cross fit, parkour and tough mudder regimes, searching not just for new-found physique, but on a quest to understand the pain and more precisely the gain of working out.