Size acceptance movements challenge dominant weight-based health ideology by highlighting the oppressiveness of weight stigma, and the growing body of evidence supporting the complex nature of the weight-health relationship. The authors examined responses to these movements via a critical discourse analysis of focus group discussions with 21 female participants. Although generally sympathetic to the impact of weight stigma, participants frequently fell back on assumptions of weight as personally controllable and health as a moral obligation. These findings are discussed in terms of the authority and pervasiveness of public health messages and the barriers they present to size acceptance movements
The dominant obesity discourse which emphasises individual moral responsibility and lifestyle modifi...
This study analyses how the discourse of healthism contributes to the social construction of weight ...
Across two studies, we examined the double-edged sword hypothesis, which outlines effects of weight-...
Size acceptance movements challenge dominant weight-basedhealth ideology by highlighting the oppress...
Research has shown that weight-related public health campaigns can inadvertently stigmatise individu...
This study sampled 2872 obesity-relevant comments from three years of interest from a multi-topic on...
In recent years concerns about an ‘epidemic of obesity’ and its associated implications for health h...
The human experience is fraught with stigmatizing experiences—whether framed upon race, gender, body...
The health consequences of excess body weight have been widely documented and publicised, and the we...
Fat stigma and discrimination are prevalent in the U.S. and have harmful effects (Puhl, Adreyeva, an...
Objectives: In the popular news media, public health officials routinely emphasize the health risks ...
Dominant discourses represent body weight as a consequence of lifestyle, equating 'fatness' with 'di...
Social science researchers have tackled the social “problem” of fatness across several disciplines, ...
Obesity is understood as a major medical and public health challenge, but the stigma attached to it ...
This paper critically explores the similarities between social marketing campaigns and 'shock tactic...
The dominant obesity discourse which emphasises individual moral responsibility and lifestyle modifi...
This study analyses how the discourse of healthism contributes to the social construction of weight ...
Across two studies, we examined the double-edged sword hypothesis, which outlines effects of weight-...
Size acceptance movements challenge dominant weight-basedhealth ideology by highlighting the oppress...
Research has shown that weight-related public health campaigns can inadvertently stigmatise individu...
This study sampled 2872 obesity-relevant comments from three years of interest from a multi-topic on...
In recent years concerns about an ‘epidemic of obesity’ and its associated implications for health h...
The human experience is fraught with stigmatizing experiences—whether framed upon race, gender, body...
The health consequences of excess body weight have been widely documented and publicised, and the we...
Fat stigma and discrimination are prevalent in the U.S. and have harmful effects (Puhl, Adreyeva, an...
Objectives: In the popular news media, public health officials routinely emphasize the health risks ...
Dominant discourses represent body weight as a consequence of lifestyle, equating 'fatness' with 'di...
Social science researchers have tackled the social “problem” of fatness across several disciplines, ...
Obesity is understood as a major medical and public health challenge, but the stigma attached to it ...
This paper critically explores the similarities between social marketing campaigns and 'shock tactic...
The dominant obesity discourse which emphasises individual moral responsibility and lifestyle modifi...
This study analyses how the discourse of healthism contributes to the social construction of weight ...
Across two studies, we examined the double-edged sword hypothesis, which outlines effects of weight-...