Literature DB >> 12825785

Miasmatic calories and saturating fats: fear of contamination in anorexia.

Megan Warin1.   

Abstract

This paper draws on ethnographic material to challenge the taken-for-granted relationship between anorexia and fear of fat. While popular understandings assume anorexia to be an extension of everyday dietary guidelines and a fear of weight gain from foods high in fats and calories, I argue that it is fear of contamination rather than fear of fat per se that is at issue. Through a critique and extension of Mary Douglas' structuralist typology and Julia Kristeva's embodied theory of abjection, I demonstrate that it is the qualities of certain foods, and in particular their amorphous natures, that render them contaminating. Saturating fats and invisible calories are considered dangerous by people with anorexia because they have the ability to move, seep, and infiltrate the body through the interplay of senses. Foods that transgress conceptual and bodily boundaries are thus to be avoided at all costs, for they have the potential to defile and pollute. In light of the low recovery rates for those with anorexia within Australia (and internationally), the findings of this paper have significant implications for the understanding and treatment of this disorder.

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Year:  2003        PMID: 12825785     DOI: 10.1023/a:1023683905157

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Cult Med Psychiatry        ISSN: 0165-005X


  7 in total

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Journal:  Int J Eat Disord       Date:  1997-01       Impact factor: 4.861

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  7 in total
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2.  "Time's up" - staff's management of mealtimes on inpatient eating disorder units.

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3.  Material Environments and the Shaping of Anorexic Embodiment: Towards A Materialist Account of Eating Disorders.

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Journal:  Cult Med Psychiatry       Date:  2021-04-07

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