The Promised Body: Diet Culture, the Fat Subject, and Ambivalence as Resistance

Since the turn of the twentieth century, middle-class Americans have considered the thin body--ostensibly the result of self-control and self-discipline--a moral imperative and a symbol of good citizenship. In this thesis, I provide a critical perspective on fat studies by examining the ways in whic...

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Main Author: Dolan, Jennifer
Format: Others
Published: Scholar Commons 2018
Subjects:
Online Access:https://scholarcommons.usf.edu/etd/7614
https://scholarcommons.usf.edu/cgi/viewcontent.cgi?article=8811&context=etd
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spelling ndltd-USF-oai-scholarcommons.usf.edu-etd-88112019-10-04T05:10:12Z The Promised Body: Diet Culture, the Fat Subject, and Ambivalence as Resistance Dolan, Jennifer Since the turn of the twentieth century, middle-class Americans have considered the thin body--ostensibly the result of self-control and self-discipline--a moral imperative and a symbol of good citizenship. In this thesis, I provide a critical perspective on fat studies by examining the ways in which the field authorizes itself in a society that deems the fat body unhealthy, costly, and immoral. As one potential solution to fat-hatred, fat studies proposes fat-positivity, but I argue that fat-positivity requires an extraordinary act of imagination in which the fat person overcomes what I term the ideology of thinness and subsequently feels good about herself. Importing models of ambivalence from disability studies, I propose ambivalence as an alternative to fat-positivity. I argue that ambivalence is a legitimate response when living in a society that de-values one's embodiment, but ambivalence is undertheorized by fat studies scholars. In Chapter 2, I analyze from a feminist perspective Tweets with the hashtag "feeling fat," tracing the emotion to cultural ambivalence about consumption and consumerism. In Chapter 3, I examine how the genre of the fat memoir authorizes itself during an "obesity epidemic" and what those methods reveal about gendered selfhood. Instead of indicting these Twitter users and fat memoirists for their purported lack of fat-positivity, I emphasize instead the social situations that give rise to these cultural forms. I suggest that drawing attention to ambivalence is a form of political resistance. 2018-03-14T07:00:00Z text application/pdf https://scholarcommons.usf.edu/etd/7614 https://scholarcommons.usf.edu/cgi/viewcontent.cgi?article=8811&context=etd Graduate Theses and Dissertations Scholar Commons Disability Studies Fat Studies Feeling Fat Fat Memoir Self-Help American Studies
collection NDLTD
format Others
sources NDLTD
topic Disability Studies
Fat Studies
Feeling Fat
Fat Memoir
Self-Help
American Studies
spellingShingle Disability Studies
Fat Studies
Feeling Fat
Fat Memoir
Self-Help
American Studies
Dolan, Jennifer
The Promised Body: Diet Culture, the Fat Subject, and Ambivalence as Resistance
description Since the turn of the twentieth century, middle-class Americans have considered the thin body--ostensibly the result of self-control and self-discipline--a moral imperative and a symbol of good citizenship. In this thesis, I provide a critical perspective on fat studies by examining the ways in which the field authorizes itself in a society that deems the fat body unhealthy, costly, and immoral. As one potential solution to fat-hatred, fat studies proposes fat-positivity, but I argue that fat-positivity requires an extraordinary act of imagination in which the fat person overcomes what I term the ideology of thinness and subsequently feels good about herself. Importing models of ambivalence from disability studies, I propose ambivalence as an alternative to fat-positivity. I argue that ambivalence is a legitimate response when living in a society that de-values one's embodiment, but ambivalence is undertheorized by fat studies scholars. In Chapter 2, I analyze from a feminist perspective Tweets with the hashtag "feeling fat," tracing the emotion to cultural ambivalence about consumption and consumerism. In Chapter 3, I examine how the genre of the fat memoir authorizes itself during an "obesity epidemic" and what those methods reveal about gendered selfhood. Instead of indicting these Twitter users and fat memoirists for their purported lack of fat-positivity, I emphasize instead the social situations that give rise to these cultural forms. I suggest that drawing attention to ambivalence is a form of political resistance.
author Dolan, Jennifer
author_facet Dolan, Jennifer
author_sort Dolan, Jennifer
title The Promised Body: Diet Culture, the Fat Subject, and Ambivalence as Resistance
title_short The Promised Body: Diet Culture, the Fat Subject, and Ambivalence as Resistance
title_full The Promised Body: Diet Culture, the Fat Subject, and Ambivalence as Resistance
title_fullStr The Promised Body: Diet Culture, the Fat Subject, and Ambivalence as Resistance
title_full_unstemmed The Promised Body: Diet Culture, the Fat Subject, and Ambivalence as Resistance
title_sort promised body: diet culture, the fat subject, and ambivalence as resistance
publisher Scholar Commons
publishDate 2018
url https://scholarcommons.usf.edu/etd/7614
https://scholarcommons.usf.edu/cgi/viewcontent.cgi?article=8811&context=etd
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