Literature DB >> 29757091

Striving for liminality: Eating disorders and social suffering.

Karin Eli1.   

Abstract

In this article, I argue that eating disorders constitute a form of social suffering, in which sufferers embody liminality as a response to, and a reflection of, oppressive sociality, structural violence, and institutional constraints. Based on the illness narratives of people with anorexia nervosa, bulimia nervosa, and their subclinical variants in Israel, the analysis draws the experiential, the social, and the structural into critical focus. These narratives, which delineate lived experiences of self-starving, bingeing, and purging, and the attendant viscerality of hunger, fullness, and emptiness, reveal how participants developed an embodied drawing inward and away, being at once within and without society for extended periods of time, through eating disordered practices. This liminal positioning, I argue, was a mode through which participants cultivated alternative (if temporary) personal spaces, negotiated identities, and anesthetized pain: processes many deemed essential to survival. Embedding the participants' narratives of eating disordered experiences within familial, societal, and political-economic forces that shaped their individual lives, I examine the participants' striving for liminality as at once intimately embodied and structurally mapped. The analysis suggests that policy initiatives for eating disorder prevention must address the social suffering that eating disorders manifest: suffering caused by structures and institutions that reinforce social inequality, violence, and injustice.

Entities:  

Keywords:  Israel; eating disorders; illness narratives; liminality; medical anthropology; social suffering

Mesh:

Year:  2018        PMID: 29757091     DOI: 10.1177/1363461518757799

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Transcult Psychiatry        ISSN: 1363-4615


  6 in total

1.  Women, Exercise, and Eating Disorder Recovery: The Normal and the Pathological.

Authors:  Hester Hockin-Boyers; Megan Warin
Journal:  Qual Health Res       Date:  2021-02-16

2.  Embodiment as a Paradigm for Understanding and Treating SE-AN: Locating the Self in Culture.

Authors:  Connie Marguerite Musolino; Megan Warin; Peter Gilchrist
Journal:  Front Psychiatry       Date:  2020-06-12       Impact factor: 4.157

3.  Maladaptive Consequences of Mental Intrusions with Obsessive, Dysmorphic, Hypochondriac, and Eating-disorders Related Contents: Cross-cultural Differences.

Authors:  Belén Pascual-Vera; Burcin Akin; Amparo Belloch; Gioia Bottesi; David A Clark; Guy Doron; Héctor Fernández-Alvarez; Marta Ghisi; Beatriz Gómez; Mujgan Inozu; Antonia Jiménez-Ros; Richard Moulding; M Angeles Ruiz; Giti Shams; Claudio Sica
Journal:  Int J Clin Health Psychol       Date:  2021-10-12

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

Authors:  Karin Eli; Anna Lavis
Journal:  Cult Med Psychiatry       Date:  2021-04-07

5.  Self-Harm in Eating Disorders (SHINE): a mixed-methods exploratory study.

Authors:  Anna Lavis; Sheryllin McNeil; Helen Bould; Anthony Winston; Kalen Reid; Christina L Easter; Rosina Pendrous; Maria Michail
Journal:  BMJ Open       Date:  2022-07-27       Impact factor: 3.006

6.  The disappearing body: anorexia as a conflict of embodiment.

Authors:  Thomas Fuchs
Journal:  Eat Weight Disord       Date:  2021-03-05       Impact factor: 4.652

  6 in total

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