Despite the intense level of attention directed towards obesity, there has been limited success in addressing the rising rates of this public health phenomenon. This paper argues that current approaches to obesity fail to consider concepts of embodiment, and in particular, that gendered and class-based experiences of embodiment are ignored in health promotion practices and policies. Drawing on Bourdieu's concept of habitus, this ethnographic study sought to locate obesity within the biographies and everyday experiences of two groups of women from differing socio-economic settings. Rather than identify with the clinical category of obesity, these women constructed identities that were refracted through a gendered and classed habitus, and in ...
Aim: This paper traces the genealogy of the Barker hypothesis and its intersections with popular rep...
This thesis addresses the themes body experiences in obese women and stigmatization of obesity. Both...
This article explores a theoretical legacy that underpins the ways in which many social scientists c...
Despite the intense level of attention directed towards obesity, there has been limited success in a...
In many affluent Western societies the less educated are at higher risk of developing obesity. Withi...
Obesity is a rising global health problem. On the one hand, a clearly defined medical condition, it ...
In many Western contemporary societies, ‘healthism is to the fore’ (Cheek, 2008, p.974). The intensi...
Widespread concern about a childhood obesity ‘epidemic’ has focused attention on the bodies, weight ...
The cultural meanings surrounding fatness---including the social construction of fatness as a proble...
Drawing from Pierre Bourdieu’s socio-cultural approach, this qualitative research project aimed to: ...
Social science researchers have tackled the social “problem” of fatness across several disciplines, ...
The increasing burden of chronic disease in ageing populations has shifted focus towards illness pre...
Investigating the current interest in obesity and fatness, this book explores the problems and ambig...
This paper explores the issue of what it means to be 'fat' for women in western (British/North Ameri...
Women’s body shape and weight is a topic of everyday conversation in Saudi Arabia. A generation ago ...
Aim: This paper traces the genealogy of the Barker hypothesis and its intersections with popular rep...
This thesis addresses the themes body experiences in obese women and stigmatization of obesity. Both...
This article explores a theoretical legacy that underpins the ways in which many social scientists c...
Despite the intense level of attention directed towards obesity, there has been limited success in a...
In many affluent Western societies the less educated are at higher risk of developing obesity. Withi...
Obesity is a rising global health problem. On the one hand, a clearly defined medical condition, it ...
In many Western contemporary societies, ‘healthism is to the fore’ (Cheek, 2008, p.974). The intensi...
Widespread concern about a childhood obesity ‘epidemic’ has focused attention on the bodies, weight ...
The cultural meanings surrounding fatness---including the social construction of fatness as a proble...
Drawing from Pierre Bourdieu’s socio-cultural approach, this qualitative research project aimed to: ...
Social science researchers have tackled the social “problem” of fatness across several disciplines, ...
The increasing burden of chronic disease in ageing populations has shifted focus towards illness pre...
Investigating the current interest in obesity and fatness, this book explores the problems and ambig...
This paper explores the issue of what it means to be 'fat' for women in western (British/North Ameri...
Women’s body shape and weight is a topic of everyday conversation in Saudi Arabia. A generation ago ...
Aim: This paper traces the genealogy of the Barker hypothesis and its intersections with popular rep...
This thesis addresses the themes body experiences in obese women and stigmatization of obesity. Both...
This article explores a theoretical legacy that underpins the ways in which many social scientists c...