Feminist and psychological literature has long established a link between women’s often conflicted relationship with food and social discourses that reinforce harmful notions of the ideal female body and the need for bodily self-surveillance. However, new cultures around food and eating have emerged which purport to offer different ways to connect with food. One feature of these gendered discourses is their use of feminist terminology and ideas of empowerment and emancipation. This thesis sets out to explore popular cultural discourses on food and eating by examining recent, best-selling diet books and cookbooks written by women and the iconic feminist texts that have inadvertently helped shape them. The thesis will argue that together, the...
This book draws upon auto/biographical food narratives and emphasises the power of everyday foodways...
Fat talk—the conversations women have about their own and others’ bodies—is a harmful linguistic rit...
This chapbook is a series of poems that explores the systematic and internalized ideals of the middl...
“Food is the medium through which women are addressed; in turn food has become the language of their...
Eating the Text explores women's food use and consumption in the construction of gender on stage and...
Over the past decade there have been significant shifts both in feminist approaches to the field of ...
Bulimia nervosa disproportionately affects young women and is associated with considerable distress ...
This paper focuses around women in the food chain, not in terms of agriculture and development, but ...
This article explores discursive intersections between ‘feminism’ and ‘eating disorders’, with a par...
Over the past decade, there has been a turn toward food as a site of political action. While humans ...
Bulimia, an eating disorder that affects more women than men, involves binging and compensatory beha...
Women struggle against a male dominated structure to grasp control and shape their own identities. I...
This paper explores the rise of disordered eating in a postfeminist world. Based on findings from an...
grantor: University of TorontoThe dramatic increase of eating disorders in contemporary W...
Disordered eating is a widespread phenomenon which carries emotional, psychological, and physical re...
This book draws upon auto/biographical food narratives and emphasises the power of everyday foodways...
Fat talk—the conversations women have about their own and others’ bodies—is a harmful linguistic rit...
This chapbook is a series of poems that explores the systematic and internalized ideals of the middl...
“Food is the medium through which women are addressed; in turn food has become the language of their...
Eating the Text explores women's food use and consumption in the construction of gender on stage and...
Over the past decade there have been significant shifts both in feminist approaches to the field of ...
Bulimia nervosa disproportionately affects young women and is associated with considerable distress ...
This paper focuses around women in the food chain, not in terms of agriculture and development, but ...
This article explores discursive intersections between ‘feminism’ and ‘eating disorders’, with a par...
Over the past decade, there has been a turn toward food as a site of political action. While humans ...
Bulimia, an eating disorder that affects more women than men, involves binging and compensatory beha...
Women struggle against a male dominated structure to grasp control and shape their own identities. I...
This paper explores the rise of disordered eating in a postfeminist world. Based on findings from an...
grantor: University of TorontoThe dramatic increase of eating disorders in contemporary W...
Disordered eating is a widespread phenomenon which carries emotional, psychological, and physical re...
This book draws upon auto/biographical food narratives and emphasises the power of everyday foodways...
Fat talk—the conversations women have about their own and others’ bodies—is a harmful linguistic rit...
This chapbook is a series of poems that explores the systematic and internalized ideals of the middl...