peer-reviewed“Food is the medium through which women are addressed; in turn food has become the language of their response” (Orbach cited in Benson 1997, p.137) The above quote sums up the way in which dominant conceptions of femininity filter through social practice and can become literally reflected in one’s physical body and bodily habits. This essay seeks to examine how women come to embody social ideals concerning food, eating habits, appearance and‘femininity’ itself. In particular it will seek to clarify how interpretations of eating and the female body both in the media and in medicine can become embodied and even become synonymous with ‘femininity’. Eating disorders are widely acknowledged to be a phenomenon of advanced industri...
Despite the long history of feminist research in the field and the clear relevance of questions of g...
Bibliography: pages 313-322.This study addresses eating and body problems among women. It has three ...
Eating Disorders from a gender perspective: disease, or part of life? Bc. Kristýna Kaválková ABSTRAC...
“Food is the medium through which women are addressed; in turn food has become the language of their...
Feminist and psychological literature has long established a link between women’s often conflicted r...
Eating disorders are now often approached as biopsychosocial problems, because they are widely recog...
This article explores discursive intersections between ‘feminism’ and ‘eating disorders’, with a par...
The article aims at revealing experiences of women who had eating disorders from the feminist perspe...
Despite the long history of feminist research in the field and the clear relevance of questions of g...
Feminist psychodynamic theorists argue that eating problems are not psychiatric disorders or 'slimm...
Eating disorders (EDs) are often emblematized by the upper-class young white woman anorexic or bulim...
Over the past decade there have been significant shifts both in feminist approaches to the field of ...
grantor: University of TorontoThe purpose of the current investigation was to examine the ...
Much of the research surrounding eating disorders erroneously focuses on white, female bodies and la...
This thesis is framed by a contemporary debate between feminist theorists and clinicians concernin...
Despite the long history of feminist research in the field and the clear relevance of questions of g...
Bibliography: pages 313-322.This study addresses eating and body problems among women. It has three ...
Eating Disorders from a gender perspective: disease, or part of life? Bc. Kristýna Kaválková ABSTRAC...
“Food is the medium through which women are addressed; in turn food has become the language of their...
Feminist and psychological literature has long established a link between women’s often conflicted r...
Eating disorders are now often approached as biopsychosocial problems, because they are widely recog...
This article explores discursive intersections between ‘feminism’ and ‘eating disorders’, with a par...
The article aims at revealing experiences of women who had eating disorders from the feminist perspe...
Despite the long history of feminist research in the field and the clear relevance of questions of g...
Feminist psychodynamic theorists argue that eating problems are not psychiatric disorders or 'slimm...
Eating disorders (EDs) are often emblematized by the upper-class young white woman anorexic or bulim...
Over the past decade there have been significant shifts both in feminist approaches to the field of ...
grantor: University of TorontoThe purpose of the current investigation was to examine the ...
Much of the research surrounding eating disorders erroneously focuses on white, female bodies and la...
This thesis is framed by a contemporary debate between feminist theorists and clinicians concernin...
Despite the long history of feminist research in the field and the clear relevance of questions of g...
Bibliography: pages 313-322.This study addresses eating and body problems among women. It has three ...
Eating Disorders from a gender perspective: disease, or part of life? Bc. Kristýna Kaválková ABSTRAC...