| Literature DB >> 28155520 |
Abstract
This article adds historical dimension to the developing literature on "obesity stigma": negative treatment and discrimination experienced as a consequence of the belief that overweight people are lazy and lacking willpower and basic knowledge about nutrition. Interviews with women who identified as fat suggest that medical and cultural concern about weight was conflated in their interactions with doctors, peers, and family. Stigma was a cause of frustration and despair for those deemed obese, who felt that unfair assumptions were made about their lifestyle and their abilities. In response, the women interviewed formed organizations, exercise classes, and social activities for "fat women only." Fat activists offer unique insight, because their work sheds light not only on the impact of obesity stigma but also on how some women responded to and resisted the medicalization and objectification of their bodies.Entities:
Keywords: Health at Every Size (HAES); fat; mouvements sociaux; obesity; obésité; social movements; surpoids
Year: 2013 PMID: 28155520 DOI: 10.3138/cbmh.30.1.55
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Can Bull Med Hist ISSN: 0823-2105