The Great Ivy League Nude Posture Photo Scandal: New York Times Magazine, January 15, 1995
| AUTHOR | Ganser, L. J.; Rosenbaum, Ron |
| PUBLISHER | Audible Studios on Brilliance (09/05/2017) |
| PRODUCT TYPE | Audio (MP3 CD) |
One afternoon in the late 1970s, deep in the labyrinthine interior of a massive Gothic tower in New Haven, an unsuspecting employee of Yale University opened a long-locked room in the Payne Whitney Gymnasium and stumbled upon something shocking and disturbing.
Shocking, because what he found was an enormous cache of nude photographs, thousands and thousands of photographs of young men in front, side, and rear poses. Disturbing, because on closer inspection the photos looked like the record of a bizarre body-piercing ritual: sticking out from the spine of each and every body was a row of sharp metal pins. In "The Great Ivy League Nude Posture Scandal," Ron Rosenbaum embarks on a quest for the lost nude "posture photos," and through his reporting finds both a scandal and an extreme example of academic folly that bares sinister eugenic origins.
"The Great Ivy League Nude Posture Scandal" was originally published in the New York Times Magazine, January 15, 1995.
One afternoon in the late 1970s, deep in the labyrinthine interior of a massive Gothic tower in New Haven, an unsuspecting employee of Yale University opened a long-locked room in the Payne Whitney Gymnasium and stumbled upon something shocking and disturbing.
Shocking, because what he found was an enormous cache of nude photographs, thousands and thousands of photographs of young men in front, side, and rear poses. Disturbing, because on closer inspection the photos looked like the record of a bizarre body-piercing ritual: sticking out from the spine of each and every body was a row of sharp metal pins. In "The Great Ivy League Nude Posture Scandal," Ron Rosenbaum embarks on a quest for the lost nude "posture photos," and through his reporting finds both a scandal and an extreme example of academic folly that bares sinister eugenic origins.
"The Great Ivy League Nude Posture Scandal" was originally published in the New York Times Magazine, January 15, 1995.
The Pulitzer Prize-winning writer and historian Thomas Powers called him "one of the few distinctive voices of modern American literary journalism." His work has been characterized by the essayist Phillip Lopate as combining "the skills of a terrific investigative reporter and an accomplished literary stylist with an idiosyncratic streak all his own."
More than ten years ago, he began investigating certain unresolved controversies among Hitler biographers, and ultimately embarked on an odyssey that took him from Vienna and Munich to London, Paris, and Jerusalem. The book that emerged combines original research and dramatic face-to-face encounters with historians, philosophers, psychologists, and theologians as they attempt to account for the elusive figure of Adolf Hitler and the meanings projected upon him by his explainers.
Currently Ron Rosenbaum writes for the New York Times Magazine, and The New York Observer, and teaches a course on literary journalism at the Columbia Graduate School of journalism.
