This ethnography takes the reader into the Australian suburbs to learn about food, eating and bodies during the highly political context of one of Australia’s largest childhood obesity interventions. While there is ample evidence about the number of people who are overweight or obese and an abundance of information about what and how to eat, obesity remains ‘a problem’ in high-income countries such as Australia. Rather than rely on common assumptions that people are making all the wrong choices, this volume reveals the challenges of ‘eating healthy’ when money is scarce and how, different versions of
being fat
and
doing fat
happen in everyday worlds of precarity. Without acknowledgement of the multiple realities of fatness and obesity, interventions will continue to have limited reach.
Warin / Zivkovic
Fatness, Obesity, and Disadvantage in the Australian Suburbs jetzt bestellen!
Weitere Infos & Material
1. Introduction.- 2. Why is Obesity Such a Political Issue?.- 3. How to Taste a Trifle.- 4. Romantic Complexity and the Slipper Slope to Lifestyle Drift.- 5. Hide the Sugar!.- 6. Fat can ‘Do Stuff'.- 7. Shades of Shame and Pride.- 8. Conclusion.
Megan Warin, PhD, is a social anthropologist and an Australian Research Council (ARC) Future Fellow at the University of Adelaide, Australia. She is the author of
Abject Relations: Everyday Worlds of Anorexia
(2010), published in the series Cambridge Studies in Medical Anthropology.
Tanya Zivkovic, PhD, is a social anthropologist who holds an Australian Research Council Discovery Early Career Research Award at the University of Adelaide, Australia. Tanya’s book
Death and Reincarnation in Tibetan Buddhism
:
In-Between Bodies
was published in the Routledge Critical Studies in Buddhism seriesin 2014.