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Draws on ethnographic methods to consider the impact of cultural differences, embodiment and local knowledge on understanding obesity 
 Reconstructs how obesity and fatness are studied 
 Examines the understanding of obesity in a range of geographic locations including Australia, the United Arab Emirates and Cuba
List of contents
	Acknowledgements
	Dedication	
Introduction: Re-Constructing Obesity	
Megan B. McCullough and Jessica A. Hardin	Part I: Naturalizing Measures and Universalizing Effects	Chapter 1. Resocializing Body Weight, Obesity and Health Agency	
Anne E. Becker	Chapter 2. The Mismeasure of Obesity	
Emily Yates-Doerr	Chapter 3. 'Diabesity' and the stigmatizing of lifestyle in Australia	
Darlene McNaughton	Part II: Cross-Cultural Body Discourses and Unstable Categories	Chapter 4. Obesity in Cuba: Memories of the Special Period and Approaches to Weight Loss Today	
Hanna Garth	Chapter 5. Fasting for Health, Fasting for God: Samoan Evangelical Christian Responses to Obesity and Chronic Disease	
Jessica A. Hardin	Part III: Fat Etiologies and Conflicting Interventions	Chapter 6. Perspectives on Diabetes and Obesity from an Anthropologist in Behavioral Medicine	
Rochelle Rosen	Chapter 7. Body Image and Weight Concerns among Emirati Women in the United Arab Emirates	
Sarah Trainer	Chapter 8. 'Not Neutral Ground': Exploring School as a Site for Childhood Obesity Intervention and Prevention Programs	
Tracey Galloway and Tina Moffat	Part IV: Cultures of Practice	Chapter 9. An Ounce of Prevention is Worth a Ton of Controversy: Exploring Tensions in the Fields of Obesity and Eating Disorder Prevention	
Lisa R. Rubin and Jessica A. Joseph	Chapter 10. Fat and Knocked-Up: An Embodied Analysis of Stigma, Visibility, and Invisibility in the Biomedical Management of an Obese Pregnancy	
Megan B. McCullough	Afterword	Stephen McGarvey	Index
About the author
	Megan B. McCullough is a Research Health Scientistat the Center for Healthcare Organization and Implementation Research (CHOIR), Health Services Research &Development, US Department of Veterans Affairs.  Her current research examines pharmaceuticalization, hierarchies of knowledge among healthcare teams, non-physician clinicians, patient-provider communication and patient-centered care.
	Jessica A. Hardin is an assistant professor of anthropology at Pacific University. Her research examines the intersections of Christianity, metabolic disorders, and well-being in Samoa.
Summary
Draws on ethnographic methods to consider the impact of cultural differences, embodiment and local knowledge on understanding obesity Reconstructs how obesity and fatness are studied Examines the understanding of obesity in a range of geographic locations including Australia, the United Arab Emirates and Cuba