Body Drop: Notes on Fandom and Pain in Professional Wrestling

Brian Oliu
4.04
26 ratings 10 reviews
Professional wrestling is a strange beast full of contradictions-part live soap opera, part hypermasculine violent spectacle. It is an indelibly American pastime enjoyed by millions and leads a select group of wrestlers to international fame. It's also a sport that leaves many of its athletes broken and battered, at serious risk of addiction, poverty, and early death. Body Drop looks deeply at the nuances of professional wrestling and its strange place within American culture. Brian Oliu offers deeply personal meditations on such topics as disability, chronic pain, body image, masculinity, class, and more, all through the lens of American professional wrestling. Wrestling is a sport that is gleefully fake, but the people who love it are very real. In holding up this particular part of American culture to scrutiny, Oliu acknowledges that the wrestling world, like our own, is one that has been crafted, but by showing readers the scaffolding that holds everything up, he invites us to figure out what holds our own realities straight.
Genres:
208 Pages

Community Reviews:

5 star
13 (50%)
4 star
5 (19%)
3 star
4 (15%)
2 star
4 (15%)
1 star
0 (0%)

Readers also enjoyed

Other books by Brian Oliu

Lists with this book

Have a Nice Day!: A Tale of Blood and Sweatsocks
Hitman: My Real Life in the Cartoon World of Wrestling
A Lion's Tale: Around the World in Spandex
Best Wrestling Books
471 books155 voters
Have a Nice Day!: A Tale of Blood and Sweatsocks
Undisputed: How to Become the World Champion in 1,372 Easy Steps
Cheating Death, Stealing Life: The Eddie Guerrero Story
Wrasslin'
217 books23 voters