Wrongly or rightly, I think of the Utne Reader as one of the voices of the upper-middle-class self-righteous "progressiver-than-thou" movement, which has so far been more of an enemy of fat activism than an ally. So when I found out that they published two articles that are critical of current rhetoric around fat and obesity, I felt like maybe the message was getting through to some people who are usually anti-fat.
"The Food Police: Why Michael Pollan makes me want to eat Cheetos by Julie Guthman, from Gastronomica has this important comment:
The article also does a good job getting at the moral angle behind "obesity rhetoric", how fatness has come to stand in for sin and thinness for moral superiority, without reference to how anyone actually behaves. So does this one: Shame on US: How an obsession with obesity turned fat into a moral failing by Hannah Lobel. Excerpt: "We continue to treat obesity as if it’s either an original sin we’re born with and must repent or a cardinal sin we choose to commit."
I did not read the comments on either article. Articles like this tend to attract some fat-hating comments, so approach at your own risk.
"The Food Police: Why Michael Pollan makes me want to eat Cheetos by Julie Guthman, from Gastronomica has this important comment:
In a course I taught, Politics of Obesity, I was not surprised by the number of students who wrote in their journals of their hidden “fatness” or eating disorders. The number of entries that stated how the course itself had produced body anxiety and intensified concern over diet and exercise, however, was shocking, given that much of the material was critical of obesity talk. The philosopher Michel Foucault might have called this the “productive” power of obesity talk—naming a behavior as a problem intensifies anxiety about that behavior.This is really true for me and it's why I limit how much I read about fat and obesity—even the positive fat-activist stuff makes me feel uncomfortable sometimes. Every once in a while I'd like to just get through a day without thinking about how my body is at the center of a huge cultural debate about Good and Eeevul.
The article also does a good job getting at the moral angle behind "obesity rhetoric", how fatness has come to stand in for sin and thinness for moral superiority, without reference to how anyone actually behaves. So does this one: Shame on US: How an obsession with obesity turned fat into a moral failing by Hannah Lobel. Excerpt: "We continue to treat obesity as if it’s either an original sin we’re born with and must repent or a cardinal sin we choose to commit."
I did not read the comments on either article. Articles like this tend to attract some fat-hating comments, so approach at your own risk.
no subject
Date: 26 Feb 2008 01:44 am (UTC)Cool!
The main thing that I want to get across is that we all control the shape of our bodies about as much as we control the color of our skin.
Yeah, body shape and size are pretty much genetic.
we can be a little thinner if we exercise
I would say that "some people get thinner when they exercise." But some people don't, and some people gain weight (because muscle is denser than fat). Some people's body shape changes when they exercise - not drastically, but even if they don't lose weight they might find their measurements are different.
But there's no single truth about what happens to people's bodies when they exercise - EXCEPT that it's almost a universal truth that people who exercise regularly have better health indicators than people who don't. And that's true regardless of a person's weight.