Imagining a Better Future by Re-imagining the Past

Sunday, May 16, 2010

Going Back to Nature

“When every night,
The set that's smart

Is intruding in nudist parties in studios,

Anything Goes.”

Lyrics to the song “Anything Goes,” written by Cole Porter, 1934


After a long series on a rather serious subject I think its fitting to quote John Cleese, “And now for something completely different.” In this case, that difference is an essay on how the modern nudist movement actually traces its roots back to the diesel era.

Long before the diesel era organized social nudism was well developed in Germany, which many see as the birthplace of modern social nudism. Known as the Freikörperkultur (FKK), which translates as Free Body Culture, Germany saw a dramatic increase in popularity of nudism during the Roaring Twenties. As an example of its growth in popularity Germany’s first nude beach was established on Sylt island in 1920. No one should be surprised that the Nazis heavily suppressed German social nudism when they rose to power. According to Hermann Goring, “One of the greatest dangers for German culture and morality is the so-called nudity movement.” After World War II social nudism made a dramatic comeback and flourished in both East and West Germany.

German Nudist Magazine from the 1920’s

Social nudism wasn’t unknown in England prior to the diesel era either. Previously there had been several English nudist advocates, such as socialist and activist Edward Carpenter. In 1924 the first successful nudist club in the UK, which was named the “Moonella Group," was established at Wickford, Essex.

Just as in England there had also been several French advocates of social nudism prior to diesel era, such as a Frenchmen named S. Gay who established a naturist community at Bois-Fourgon in 1903. But it was Marcel Kienné de Mongeot who is often credited as being the founder of the modern French nudist movement in 1920. In the 1930’s the Doctors André and Gaston Durville opened Héliopolis naturist center on Ile du Levant as well as other nudist sites. Another French nudism advocate Albert Lecoq founded the North Gymnastics Center in 1933.

America also saw the birth of its own modern nudist movement in the 1920’s. Most trace the modern American social nudist movement to Kurt Barthel, who started the American League for Physical Culture in 1929. The League had its first outing, consisting of 3 women and 4 men most of who were in their twenties, later that year in New York. In addition to founding the League, in May of 1932 Kurt Barthel also established America's first official nudist camp in New Jersey called 'Sky Farm.' In the 1930’s the American Gymnosphical Association, an organization formed by a group of members who had left the American League, established another nudist club that they named 'Rock Lodge.'

Kurt Barthel

Barthel’s American League, after a series of spin-offs and reorganizations over the years, is considered the ancestor of the current American Association for Nude Recreation, which now has over 50,000 members and is considered one of the leaders in the today’s nudist (now called naturist) movement. In addition, both Sky Farm and Rock Lodge continue to operate today as member-owned co-operative naturist clubs.

One last item of historical curiosity is an advertisement from a July 1937 issue of Life magazine for Simonize Car Wax that includes a photo of a nude woman in a transparent raincoat that reads, “Don’t… Let Your Car Go Nudist!” Link to Life Magazine.

It should be obvious that contrary to popular assumption modern nudism as a movement isn’t a product of the Baby Boomers, or the hippy culture of the 1960’s, but is actually a product of the diesel era. Of course on a lighter note, being that this is a dieselpunk site, this revelation may also give some readers a new way to define “dieselpunk fashion.”

Sunday, May 2, 2010

Dieselpunk Politics – Part 4

This is the last of the installments exploring the possibility that there may exist something that could be labeled as dieselpunk political/ economic movements.

As I’ve done before there are some disclaimers that I feel are necessary. First, while only two socio-political systems have been addressed in my blog I don’t mean to imply these are the only two possible systems that may be worthy of being called dieselpunk politics. But, in my opinion, these two political/ economic schools are useful for demonstrating clear examples of two possible systems. Second, it’s not my intent to advocate for any specific socio-economic theory. Once again I wish to repeat that the goal of these blog entries is to offer support for my claim that such a label can be applied appropriately.

In this final entry on dieselpunk politics I’m honored that Hayen Mill has been so gracious as to honor us with another essay. In this case Mr. Mill has written on a school of thought commonly called “anarcho-capitalism” and its ties to the diesel era. So once again, I’m honored to turn my blog over to Mr. Hayen Mill. ~ Larry


A highly controversial political ideology that one could label as ‘dieselpunk’ is anarcho-capitalism, under the broader term of libertarianism. Contrary to minarchism, it advocates the elimination of the state and the elevation of the sovereign individual in a free market. In an anarcho-capitalist society, law enforcement, courts, and all other security services would be provided by voluntarily-funded competitors such as private defense agencies rather than through taxation, and money would be privately and competitively provided in an open market. According to anarcho-capitalists, personal and economic activities would be regulated by the natural laws of the market and through private law rather than through politics.

Anarcho-capitalists, a term originally coined by Murray Rothbard, see free-market capitalism as the basis for a free and prosperous society. "Capitalism," as anarcho-capitalists employ the term, is not to be confused with state monopoly capitalism, crony capitalism, corporatism, or contemporary mixed economies, wherein natural market incentives and disincentives are skewed by state intervention.

Murray Rothbard

In contrast with all the other anarchist theories, anarcho-capitalism is based upon the subjective theory of value, which holds that to possess value an object must be both useful and scarce, with the extent of that value dependent upon the ability of an object to satisfy the wants of any given individual.

One of recent possible examples of anarcho-capitalism in practice can be the Old West in the United States in the period of 1830 to 1900, according to the research of Terry L. Anderson and P. J. Hill, given that “private agencies provided the necessary basis for an orderly society in which property was protected and conflicts were resolved," and that the common popular perception that the Old West was chaotic with little respect for property rights is incorrect.

Not so wild west couple

Central to anarcho-capitalism are the concepts of self-ownership and original appropriation (aka homesteading principle), as well as the non-aggression principle (NAP). Anarcho-capitalists advocate individual or joint (i.e. private) ownership of the means of production and the product of labor regardless of what the individual "needs" or does not need.

Some contemporary examples of anarcho-capitalism include Merchant Law and the common modern practice of settling disputes through mutually agreed arbitration rather than government courts.

As written in the introduction to dieselpunk politics, there are three general elements necessary for one to be able to use the label dieselpunk:

1)contemporary in that it can be found today, 2) decodence in that we can identify it as existing in some form during the 20s through 40s, and 3) ‘punk’ in that it emphasizes independence and exists primarily outside the mainstream of politics of that time as well as today.


Anarcho-Capitalism fits these three by being contemporary (thanks to the Austrian School of Economics and writers like David D. Friedman) while at the same time paying tribute to the era of 1920s-1940s, when the idea of the businessman as the agent vital to the advancement of society was immortalized by examples of many great industrialists. It also emphasizes independence in that it rejects central authority and celebrates the integrity of businessmen when being confronted with regulatory agencies or government bureaucrats (this is immortalized by Ayn Rand’s Atlas Shrugged). While not being a defendant of anarcho-capitalism, the book was the starting point of many contemporary anarcho-capitalists. It also exists primarily outside of the mainstream of politics, both during the 1920s-1940s as well as today. It is, however, currently rejected by most social anarchists, mostly by the use of the term anarchism as by the dispute of the legitimacy of private property, giving more emphasis to its marginality.