Witty, cultured, provocative, and shamelessly enjoyable, The Rear View is a celebration of the behind, ranging from its physical evolution to its history as a source of artistic and literary inspiration and as a barometer of social attitudes. The ancient Greeks revered the buttocks as being an aspect of the divine and portrayed them enthusiastically on marble statuary. With the Christian era, however, depiction of the nude figure sank into shameful ignominy until the fifteenth century, when Florentine artists once more raised the bottom to subliminal heights, from which lofty eminence it was dashed by the prudish Victorians, who found everything from the waist down a source of embarrassment. Today dress designers decree that the bottom should once more be the focus of attention, and no dedicated followers of fashion can afford to neglect their rear view--or this well-rounded appraisal of it. Jean-Luc Hennig, a French linguist and essayist, begins the book by writing that "Buttocks" date from remotest antiquity. They appeared when men conceived the idea of standing up on their hind legs and remaining there--a crucial moment in our evolution since the buttock muscles then underwent considerable development.??But more important, Hennig surmises that as a result, man's hands were freed and the engagement of the skull on the spinal column was modified, which allowed the brain to develop. Therefore, man's buttocks are in some ways partly responsible for the early emergence of his brain. This is the brilliant and hilarious starting point of The Rear View. Beautifully written and incredibly humorous, it makes a perfect gift for an intimate of either sex.
One picture, and one tail, are worth a thousand words.
Published by Thriftbooks.com User , 27 years ago
This is another boonie dog book review from Wolfie and Kansas. Jean-Luc Hennig's book "The Rear View" is a collection of essays and vignettes about the human backside. "The Rear View" may be the best book of this subject since J.F. Federspiel's novel "Laura's Skin". However, while "The Rear View" is often cute and clever, it has two major faults.First, this book reads as if Hennig had written the text for a coffee-table book (albeit one to be placed on coffee tables in high-class bordellos), only to have an editor remove most of the pictures at the last minute to keep the price down. Much of the book discusses notable paintings and photographs of human buttocks, but since the pictures are not reproduced, it is sometimes hard to make sense of the text. The book's handful of black-and-white pictures is not adequate to illustrate the many points which Mr. Hennig seeks to make.This book also devotes nothing more than a passing mention to the major inadequacy of human hindquarters--the absence of a tail. Doubtlessly the human practice of bobbing the tails of some dogs is just a vengeful and violent expression of human tail envy. One reason that humans talk so much is that you must chatter endlessly to convey emotions that we dogs can express with a simple wag
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