Mensendieck system explained

Mensendieck System
Specialty:physical therapy

The Mensendieck System is a therapeutic teaching methodology for female physical education claimed to be both corrective and preventive. It was developed by Bess Mensendieck (1 July 1864 New York City - 27 January 1957, born Elizabeth Marguerite de Varel Mensendieck), who was an American physician and gymnastics teacher of Dutch descent. She is one of the most important founders of early breathing and physical pedagogy in Europe and America.[1] [2]

Mensendieck published a number of books on the subject starting with the German publication titled Körperkultur des Weibes (Physical Culture of Women) with practical hygienic and aesthetic tips, 1906.[3] [4] [5]

Life

Mensendieck grew up in New York City and studied medicine in Zurich. In order to complete her practical knowledge of movement, posture and breathing, she took singing lessons in Paris and continued to study gymnastics with Genevieve Stebbins in New York. Here she also learned the movement systems of François Delsarte and the Swedish remedial gymnastics of Pehr Henrik Ling.

Her particular concern was the improvement of posture and muscle structure of the women of her time. Based on her medical background, she built her gymnastics according to the Mensendieck system strictly on the anatomical and physiological findings of the time. The focus of the bodywork was again and again on the self-perception of posture and movement. In order to effectively demonstrate the exercise techniques and change in physical postures, she included pictures of herself nude before, during and after 3 months of training in her book Körperkultur des Weibes (Munich, 1906) to illustrate what can be achieved with her training. Mensendieck believed that nudity was fundamental in enhancing women's body consciousness, which motivated all activity that made the female body strong, healthy, and beautiful.[6] However, because of the nude content, her published work was not equally enforceable in the same way in all countries.

Mensendieck's books exerted a pervasive influence over German women gym instructors into the 1930s. She taught her "Mensendieck System" mainly in Europe (Germany, Netherlands, Norway, Denmark and Austria). In 1910 the first institute for the training of gymnastics teachers was founded. After the First World War, Mensendieck left Europe, worked mostly in New York and gave annual training courses in Germany and Denmark. She spent the summer months in her Norwegian summer house. In the 1950s she lived in Copenhagen for a few years and eventually moved back to New York.

Mensendieck also worked on the German documentary film Wege zu Kraft und Schönheit (Ways to Strength and Beauty), a silent black and white cultural film about the Weimar Republic directed by Wilhelm Prager released in 1925, which aimed to show the place of the body in modern society in which both men and women were not caring enough about their physical health.

Mensendieck must have been a petite person with tremendous assertiveness and a room-filling voice. In auditoriums she could be heard clearly in the back row. Mensendieck was one of the few women who combined the ideas and demands of women's rights activists with her "Mensendieck System". "Think for yourself!" was the motto of her teaching.

Works published

Germany

America

Gallery

Norway

Mensendieck School in Oslo, Norway, 1950s, photos show women student physiotherapists training the Mensendieck System. The private college was established for Mensendieck-based physiotherapist education in Oslo in 1927 under the name Norsk Mensendieckskole A/S, and taken over by the Norwegian state in 1979. From 1992, the Mensendieck School was incorporated into the Bislet University College Center (Bislet høgskolesenter) and named the Mensendieckschool in Oslo College of Physiotherapy. From August 1994, it became part of the department of health sciences at the newly established Oslo University College.[8] The education is currently called bachelor in physiotherapy, field of study Mensendieck.

External links

See also

Notes and References

  1. http://medical-dictionary.thefreedictionary.com/movement+therapy Movement Therapy
  2. http://www.tandfonline.com/doi/abs/10.1080/09523367.2011.567781 Seeing Your Way to Health: The Visual Pedagogy of Bess Mensendieck's Physical Culture System
  3. https://www.pilatesglossy.com/review-of-mensendiecks-body-culture-for-women/ Review of Mensendieck’s "Körperkultur des Weibes"
  4. Book: Mensendieck, Bess M.. Körperkultur des Weibes, praktisch hygienische und praktisch ästhetische Winke. Physical Culture of Women, practical hygienic and aesthetic tips. Bruckmann. Munich. 1907. de. 2.
  5. http://alexander.area24.net/BessMensendieck.htm Bess Mensendieck
  6. Book: Toepfer, Karl Eric. Empire of Ecstasy: Nudity and Movement in German Body Culture, 1910–1935.. Feminist Nacktkultur; Bess Mensendieck. University of California Press. Berkeley, Los Angeles, Oxford. 1997. 39–41. en. 9780520918276.
  7. Book: Look better, feel better; The world-renowned Mensendieck System of functional movements—for a youthful body and vibrant health. Bess M.. Mensendieck. Amy. Meusser. L. Larry. Leonard. Harper and Brothers. New York. 1954. en.
  8. News: Mensendieckskolen i Oslo. Høgskole i fysioterapi. Mensendieck School in Oslo. College of Physiotherapy. Norsk senter for forskningsdata. Oslo. no.