In contemporary Western culture a thin body is a synonym of beauty and health. Slenderness embodies ethical values, related to the duty of individuals to take care of their external appearance and internal functionality. Conversely, a fat body symbolizes the antonym of a proper body management. Fatness is not only an aesthetic problem but also a medical and moral one, because of the associated stigma, the related pathologies and, last but not least, the health care and societal costs. From this theoretical framework, the article will discuss the results of a research based on non-structural interviews. The study has involved 30 individuals considered obese by current medical standards (Body Mass Index greater than 30), who were attempting to lose weight at the time of the interview through a diet or a surgical treatment. The aim of the article is to show, firstly, how participants cope with the cult of slenderness and the condemnation of fatness displayed by media and, secondly, what effect these cultural pressures have on their everyday life, on their decision to lose weight, and, finally, on their expectation of physical change.

Mazzagatti, L. (2015). Normatività corporea e obesità. Modelli ideali, obiettivi reali e vissuti quotidiani. STUDI CULTURALI, XII(2), 161-186 [10.1405/80540].

Normatività corporea e obesità. Modelli ideali, obiettivi reali e vissuti quotidiani

MAZZAGATTI, LORIS
2015

Abstract

In contemporary Western culture a thin body is a synonym of beauty and health. Slenderness embodies ethical values, related to the duty of individuals to take care of their external appearance and internal functionality. Conversely, a fat body symbolizes the antonym of a proper body management. Fatness is not only an aesthetic problem but also a medical and moral one, because of the associated stigma, the related pathologies and, last but not least, the health care and societal costs. From this theoretical framework, the article will discuss the results of a research based on non-structural interviews. The study has involved 30 individuals considered obese by current medical standards (Body Mass Index greater than 30), who were attempting to lose weight at the time of the interview through a diet or a surgical treatment. The aim of the article is to show, firstly, how participants cope with the cult of slenderness and the condemnation of fatness displayed by media and, secondly, what effect these cultural pressures have on their everyday life, on their decision to lose weight, and, finally, on their expectation of physical change.
Articolo in rivista - Articolo scientifico
Obesity, body and embodiment, cult of slenderness, stigma of obesity, weight loss
Italian
ago-2015
2015
XII
2
161
186
none
Mazzagatti, L. (2015). Normatività corporea e obesità. Modelli ideali, obiettivi reali e vissuti quotidiani. STUDI CULTURALI, XII(2), 161-186 [10.1405/80540].
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Utilizza questo identificativo per citare o creare un link a questo documento: https://hdl.handle.net/10281/92242
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