Literature DB >> 16573717

Anorexic dis(connection): managing anorexia as an illness and an identity.

Emma Rich1.   

Abstract

This paper explores the ways in which young women 'manage' the complexities of the presentation of an anorexic identity, the stigma attached to it, and the relationships that are developed with fellow sufferers. A range of ethnographic data and 'voices' are drawn upon, including a small qualitative study within a leading centre in the UK for the treatment of eating disorders. The paper begins by outlining the ways in which for many young women, anorexia is a stigmatised identity which in various contexts comes to be perceived as an irrational and self-inflicted condition. It was reported by the young women in our study that many of their peers, families and teachers made sense of their eating disorder through a medicalised discourse which focused on visual aspects of weight gain/loss and often stigmatised the condition, reducing it to a position of pathology or irrationality. It is argued that these experiences form a type of 'discursive constraint' (Ronai 1994) which many of the young women attempt to resist by engaging with alternative contexts and relationships through which they can construct more positive self-representations of anorexia or anorexic identities. As is revealed through the various data sources, as these young women negotiate the various discourses which offer them alternative subjectivities, they come to manage anorexia as both an illness and an identity.

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Mesh:

Year:  2006        PMID: 16573717     DOI: 10.1111/j.1467-9566.2006.00493.x

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Sociol Health Illn        ISSN: 0141-9889


  17 in total

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Journal:  Sociol Health Illn       Date:  2013-11-28

2.  "Not all my fault": genetics, stigma, and personal responsibility for women with eating disorders.

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4.  Insights into the Experiences of Treatment for An Eating Disorder in Men: A Qualitative Study of Autobiographies.

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5.  Metasynthesis of the Views about Treatment of Anorexia Nervosa in Adolescents: Perspectives of Adolescents, Parents, and Professionals.

Authors:  Jordan Sibeoni; Massimiliano Orri; Marie Valentin; Marc-Antoine Podlipski; Stephanie Colin; Jerome Pradere; Anne Revah-Levy
Journal:  PLoS One       Date:  2017-01-05       Impact factor: 3.240

6.  Eating Disorder Symptomatology and Identity Formation in Adolescence: A Cross-Lagged Longitudinal Approach.

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Review 7.  Conceptualizing eating disorder psychopathology using an anxiety disorders framework: Evidence and implications for exposure-based clinical research.

Authors:  Katherine Schaumberg; Erin E Reilly; Sasha Gorrell; Cheri A Levinson; Nicholas R Farrell; Tiffany A Brown; Kathryn M Smith; Lauren M Schaefer; Jamal H Essayli; Ann F Haynos; Lisa M Anderson
Journal:  Clin Psychol Rev       Date:  2020-11-11

8.  Malaria elimination without stigmatization: a note of caution about the use of terminology in elimination settings.

Authors:  Catherine Smith; Maxine Whittaker
Journal:  Malar J       Date:  2014-09-22       Impact factor: 2.979

9.  Between difference and belonging: configuring self and others in inpatient treatment for eating disorders.

Authors:  Karin Eli
Journal:  PLoS One       Date:  2014-09-11       Impact factor: 3.240

10.  Out of my real body: cognitive neuroscience meets eating disorders.

Authors:  Giuseppe Riva
Journal:  Front Hum Neurosci       Date:  2014-05-06       Impact factor: 3.169

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