Obesity is a rising global health problem. On the one hand, a clearly defined medical condition, it is at the same time a corporeal state embedded in the social and cultural perception of fatness and body shape and size. Focusing specifically on the maternal body, contributors to the volume examine how the language and notions of obesity connect with, or stand apart from, wider societal values and moralities to do with the body, fatness, reproduction, and what is considered natural. A focus on fatness in the context of human reproduction and motherhood offers instructive insights into the global circulation and authority of biomedical facts on fatness (as "risky" anti-fit, for example). As with other social and cultural studies critical of health policy discourse, this volume challenges the spontaneous connection being made in scientific and popular understanding between fatness and ill health.
History
Publication status
Published
Publisher
Berghahn Books
Volume
22
Pages
231.0
ISBN
9780857451224
Series
Fertility, Reproduction and Sexuality
Department affiliated with
Anthropology Publications
Notes
his is an edited book edited by Maya Unnithan-Kumar, Soraya Tremayne