Description

Book Synopsis

Feminist critique has yet to deconstruct the new ‘superwoman’ ideal: the modern woman who can and must have everything, but who, in reality, is never good enough. This media myth is fertile ground for harmful practices that focus on a woman’s own body and of course for specific consumerist behaviours. Media equalization of success, self-control, and attractiveness with a thin, healthy body frame these achievements as individual responsibility. Thus, in a society where women can now do anything, only the woman herself can be blamed if she does not achieve her full potential.

Combining scientific approach with personal voices, Eating Disorders in a Capitalist World presents a critical analysis of the social context of eating disorders based on in-depth interviews with women suffering from anorexia and bulimia. Employing a variety of influential socio-cultural theories, Jelena Balabanić Mavrović closely relates various environmental influences on the development of low self-esteem, poor self-image and body dissatisfaction to the shaping of normative femininity and the experience of gender socialization in Western society. Chapters also provide a detailed review of the socio-historical development of discourses and practices related to anorexia and bulimia, including ‘healthism’, the war on obesity, and other current trends.

Providing a new perspective on female identity, Eating Disorders in a Capitalist World offers a complete insight into the world of eating disorders in today’s society, exposing how new forms of freedom for women have also become new forms of self-surveillance.



Table of Contents

Chapter 1. Introduction
Chapter 2. In-Depth Interviews with Women with Eating Disorders
Chapter 3. Development of Eating Disorders in the Socio-Historical Context
Chapter 4. Socio-cultural Theories of the Development of Eating Disorders (Anorexia and Bulimia)
Chapter 5. Research on Contemporary Social Changes and Eating Disorders
Chapter 6. Gender Roles and the Body
Chapter 7. Thematic analysis
Chapter 8. Insecure Femininity
Chapter 9. The Despised vs. The Idealized Man
Chapter 10. The Body is the Fundamental Determinant of a Female Identity
Chapter 11. Magical Food - The Morality of Food Consumption
Chapter 12. Independent Meanings of Binge Eating and Vomiting
Chapter 13. Spontaneous Eating and Using Food against Internal Chaos
Chapter 14. A Healthy Diet and Exercising – Disorder or Health?
Chapter 15. The Context of Growing Up: Confirmation of the Biopsychosocial Model of the Emergence of the Disorder
Chapter 16. Final Discussion

Eating Disorders in a Capitalist World: Super

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    A Hardback by Jelena Balabanić Mavrović

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      View other formats and editions of Eating Disorders in a Capitalist World: Super by Jelena Balabanić Mavrović

      Publisher: Emerald Publishing Limited
      Publication Date: 13/11/2023
      ISBN13: 9781804557877, 978-1804557877
      ISBN10: 1804557870

      Description

      Book Synopsis

      Feminist critique has yet to deconstruct the new ‘superwoman’ ideal: the modern woman who can and must have everything, but who, in reality, is never good enough. This media myth is fertile ground for harmful practices that focus on a woman’s own body and of course for specific consumerist behaviours. Media equalization of success, self-control, and attractiveness with a thin, healthy body frame these achievements as individual responsibility. Thus, in a society where women can now do anything, only the woman herself can be blamed if she does not achieve her full potential.

      Combining scientific approach with personal voices, Eating Disorders in a Capitalist World presents a critical analysis of the social context of eating disorders based on in-depth interviews with women suffering from anorexia and bulimia. Employing a variety of influential socio-cultural theories, Jelena Balabanić Mavrović closely relates various environmental influences on the development of low self-esteem, poor self-image and body dissatisfaction to the shaping of normative femininity and the experience of gender socialization in Western society. Chapters also provide a detailed review of the socio-historical development of discourses and practices related to anorexia and bulimia, including ‘healthism’, the war on obesity, and other current trends.

      Providing a new perspective on female identity, Eating Disorders in a Capitalist World offers a complete insight into the world of eating disorders in today’s society, exposing how new forms of freedom for women have also become new forms of self-surveillance.



      Table of Contents

      Chapter 1. Introduction
      Chapter 2. In-Depth Interviews with Women with Eating Disorders
      Chapter 3. Development of Eating Disorders in the Socio-Historical Context
      Chapter 4. Socio-cultural Theories of the Development of Eating Disorders (Anorexia and Bulimia)
      Chapter 5. Research on Contemporary Social Changes and Eating Disorders
      Chapter 6. Gender Roles and the Body
      Chapter 7. Thematic analysis
      Chapter 8. Insecure Femininity
      Chapter 9. The Despised vs. The Idealized Man
      Chapter 10. The Body is the Fundamental Determinant of a Female Identity
      Chapter 11. Magical Food - The Morality of Food Consumption
      Chapter 12. Independent Meanings of Binge Eating and Vomiting
      Chapter 13. Spontaneous Eating and Using Food against Internal Chaos
      Chapter 14. A Healthy Diet and Exercising – Disorder or Health?
      Chapter 15. The Context of Growing Up: Confirmation of the Biopsychosocial Model of the Emergence of the Disorder
      Chapter 16. Final Discussion

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