Susan Greenhalgh | American Obesity Epidemic
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American Obesity Epidemic

American Obesity Epidemic

By all accounts, America is in the midst of an obesity epidemic of catastrophic scale. In all the public talk about how the epidemic is undermining the nation, though, the voices of those targeted for fat reduction have gone largely unheard.

 

Greenhalgh’s concern about the country’s obsession with weight was born in Southern California, where she lived for nearly 20 years while teaching at the University of California, Irvine. As everyone knows, Los Angeles is the epicenter of the national cult of the thin, fit body. In Fat-talk Nation: The Human Costs of America’s War on Fat (Cornell, 2015), she draws on the narratives of young Californians to uncover the hidden workings and effects of what began as a public health campaign, but soon mushroomed into a society-wide war on fat.

Fat-Talk Nation

Fat-Talk Nation illuminates how the fight against fat seeks to create a new kind of thin, fit biocitizen, and how it conscripts other subjects – the good doctor, the good parent, the good teacher, the good coach – into the campaign. The epidemic of obesity, it shows, has produced a parallel explosion of “fat-talk” which people routinely use in attempts to shape the weight of others.

 

The book shows how the war on fat has produced a generation of young people – and especially young women — who are obsessed with their bodies and whose most fundamental sense of self comes from their size. Pervasive talk about weight is damaging their bodily and emotional health, and disrupting families and intimate relationships. The book’s core concepts (biocitizen, biomyth, biopedagogy, bioabuse, and biocop) offer powerful tools for understanding how obesity has come to remake who we are as a nation, and how we might reverse course for the next generation.

 

As in much of the world, in China the quest for the perfect, thin body has become a national preoccupation, whose effects on young women’s well-being seem strikingly similar to those seen in California. Two colleagues, shown here, did a masterful job of translating Fat-Talk Nation into Chinese. It’s now been published by the Intellectual Property Publishing House, with new prefaces by the lead translator, Bi Da, and the author.

Table of Contents and Chapter 1

Table of Contents
Chapter 1

Book Reviews

Review by Anita Harman PhD:

Fat Studies

Review by Stephanie Schiavenato:

BioSocieties

Articles on Ethnic Weight Bias and Eating Disorders

Disordered Eating/Eating Disorder: Hidden Perils of the Nation’s Fight Against Fat, Medical Anthropology Quarterly 30(4), December 2016, pp. 545-562.

Disordered Eating/Eating Disorder

Bad Biocitizens? Latinos and the US “Obesity Epidemic,” with Megan A. Carney, Human Organization 73(3), Fall 2014, pp. 267-276.

Bad Biocitizens

Weighty Subjects: The Biopolitics of the U.S. War on Fat, American Ethnologist 39(3), August 2012, pp. 471-487.

Weighty Subjects