Dominant discourses represent body weight as a consequence of lifestyle, equating ‘fatness’ with ‘disease’ and ‘thinness’ with ‘health’. Consequently, fat subjects become framed as lazy and not willing to follow a ‘healthy’ lifestyle. In neoliberal societies, where ‘the autonomous, self‐regulating individual’ is highly valued, the previous construction of fat subjects appears particularly damning. In this study, we explore how women who self‐identify as ‘large’ negotiate their body weight, health and neoliberal credentials. To this end, interviews were conducted with 18 women, and the transcripts were analysed using discourse analysis. The constructions of health and well‐being articulated by the women were much broader and more complex tha...
Since the turn of the twentieth century, middle-class Americans have considered the thin body--osten...
Obesity is a rising global health problem. On the one hand, a clearly defined medical condition, it ...
Fat talk—the conversations women have about their own and others’ bodies—is a harmful linguistic rit...
Dominant discourses represent body weight as a consequence of lifestyle, equating 'fatness' with 'di...
In many Western contemporary societies, ‘healthism is to the fore’ (Cheek, 2008, p.974). The intensi...
Using feminist poststructuralist and postcolonial lenses, I explore how young Lebanese-Canadian wome...
Using feminist poststructuralist and postcolonial lenses, we investigate how young Lebanese-Canadian...
This paper explores the issue of what it means to be 'fat' for women in western (British/North Ameri...
The cultural meanings surrounding fatness---including the social construction of fatness as a proble...
My aim in this chapter is to inspect how neoliberal economic policy and rationale are enmeshed with ...
Body size is very much linked to the gendered issue of beauty, as well as, nowadays, to irresponsibi...
Size acceptance movements challenge dominant weight-basedhealth ideology by highlighting the oppress...
Social science researchers have tackled the social “problem” of fatness across several disciplines, ...
In this article we explore the issue of what it means to be "fat" for women in Western (British/Nort...
Investigating the current interest in obesity and fatness, this book explores the problems and ambig...
Since the turn of the twentieth century, middle-class Americans have considered the thin body--osten...
Obesity is a rising global health problem. On the one hand, a clearly defined medical condition, it ...
Fat talk—the conversations women have about their own and others’ bodies—is a harmful linguistic rit...
Dominant discourses represent body weight as a consequence of lifestyle, equating 'fatness' with 'di...
In many Western contemporary societies, ‘healthism is to the fore’ (Cheek, 2008, p.974). The intensi...
Using feminist poststructuralist and postcolonial lenses, I explore how young Lebanese-Canadian wome...
Using feminist poststructuralist and postcolonial lenses, we investigate how young Lebanese-Canadian...
This paper explores the issue of what it means to be 'fat' for women in western (British/North Ameri...
The cultural meanings surrounding fatness---including the social construction of fatness as a proble...
My aim in this chapter is to inspect how neoliberal economic policy and rationale are enmeshed with ...
Body size is very much linked to the gendered issue of beauty, as well as, nowadays, to irresponsibi...
Size acceptance movements challenge dominant weight-basedhealth ideology by highlighting the oppress...
Social science researchers have tackled the social “problem” of fatness across several disciplines, ...
In this article we explore the issue of what it means to be "fat" for women in Western (British/Nort...
Investigating the current interest in obesity and fatness, this book explores the problems and ambig...
Since the turn of the twentieth century, middle-class Americans have considered the thin body--osten...
Obesity is a rising global health problem. On the one hand, a clearly defined medical condition, it ...
Fat talk—the conversations women have about their own and others’ bodies—is a harmful linguistic rit...