Fr. 117.00

Fat Bodies, Health and the Media

English · Hardback

Shipping usually within 6 to 7 weeks

Description

Read more

Informationen zum Autor Jayne Raisborough is Reader at the School of Applied Social Sciences, University of Brighton, UK. She is the author of  Lifestyle Media and the Formation of the Self  and co-editor of R isk, Identities and the Everyday.  Her current work is an empirical, visual, exploration of women’s negotiations of anti-ageing culture. Klappentext Our televisions bulge with weight-loss shows, as the news warn of the obesity epidemic. Fat is such a villain that larger people are stigmatized and we all are seduced by life-changing claims of a multi-billion pound diet industry. Yet, when we question if our bathroom scales can really tell us about our health, we start to ask just why and how fat holds such fascination. In this book, Jayne Raisborough explores interpretations of fat bodies from Palaeolithic Europe to Poverty Porn TV to argue that fat’s materiality makes it ripe for stigmatising associations. However, especially in a social context that presents health as a matter of choice, fat also emerges as an ideal redemptive substance to be pummelled and starved into submission. This book presents a ‘fat sensibility’ to demonstrate how fat is helping us all become responsibilised healthy-citizens. It asks just what self are we being asked to diet ourselves into? Jayne Raisborough is Reader at the School of Applied Social Sciences, University of Brighton, UK. She is the author of  Lifestyle Media and the Formation of the Self and co-editor of R isk, Identities and the Everyday.  Her current work is an empirical, visual, exploration of women’s negotiations of anti-ageing culture. Zusammenfassung Our televisions bulge with weight-loss shows! as the news warn of the obesity epidemic. Fat is such a villain that larger people are stigmatized and we all are seduced by life-changing claims of a multi-billion pound diet industry. Yet! when we question if our bathroom scales can really tell us about our health! we start to ask just why and how fat holds such fascination. In this book! Jayne Raisborough explores interpretations of fat bodies from Palaeolithic Europe to Poverty Porn TV to argue that fat's materiality makes it ripe for stigmatising associations. However! especially in a social context that presents health as a matter of choice! fat also emerges as an ideal redemptive substance to be pummelled and starved into submission. This book presents a 'fat sensibility' to demonstrate how fat is helping us all become responsibilised healthy-citizens. It asks just what self are we being asked to diet ourselves into? Inhaltsverzeichnis Introduction: Fat, the Media and a Fat Sensibility.- Chapter 1. The Matter of Fat.- Chapter 2. Fat Gets Melodramatic: The Obesity Epidemic and the News.- Chapter 3. Fat Finds Lifestyle: Introducing Reality Television.- Chapter 4. The Before: Fat Gets Ready for a Makeover.- Chapter 5. Sweat and Tears: Working at Redemption.- Chapter 6. Fat and on Benefits: The Obese Turn Abese.- Chapter 7. Conclusion: Fat Sensibility or Moral Panic?....

List of contents

Introduction: Fat, the Media and a Fat Sensibility.- Chapter 1. The Matter of Fat.- Chapter 2. Fat Gets Melodramatic: The Obesity Epidemic and the News.- Chapter 3. Fat Finds Lifestyle: Introducing Reality Television.- Chapter 4. The Before: Fat Gets Ready for a Makeover.- Chapter 5. Sweat and Tears: Working at Redemption.- Chapter 6. Fat and on Benefits: The Obese Turn Abese.- Chapter 7. Conclusion: Fat Sensibility or Moral Panic?.

Customer reviews

No reviews have been written for this item yet. Write the first review and be helpful to other users when they decide on a purchase.

Write a review

Thumbs up or thumbs down? Write your own review.

For messages to CeDe.ch please use the contact form.

The input fields marked * are obligatory

By submitting this form you agree to our data privacy statement.