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Feeding Anorexia - Gender and Power at a Treatment Center (Paperback, New)
Loot Price: R836
Discovery Miles 8 360
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Feeding Anorexia - Gender and Power at a Treatment Center (Paperback, New)
Series: Body, Commodity, Text
Expected to ship within 12 - 17 working days
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Feeding Anorexia challenges prevailing assumptions regarding the
notorious difficulty of curing anorexia nervosa. Through a vivid
chronicle of treatments at a state-of-the-art hospital program,
Helen Gremillion reveals how the therapies participate unwittingly
in culturally dominant ideals of gender, individualism, physical
fitness, and family life that have contributed to the dramatic
increase in the incidence of anorexia in the United States since
the 1970s. She describes how strategies including the meticulous
measurement of patients' progress in terms of body weight and
calories consumed ultimately feed the problem, not only reinforcing
ideas about the regulation of women's bodies, but also fostering in
many girls and women greater expertise in the formidable
constellation of skills anorexia requires. At the same time,
Gremillion shows how contradictions and struggles in treatment can
help open up spaces for change.Feeding Anorexia is based on
fourteen months of ethnographic research in a small inpatient unit
located in a major teaching and research hospital in the western
United States. Gremillion attended group, family, and individual
therapy sessions and medical staff meetings; ate meals with
patients; and took part in outings and recreational activities. She
also conducted over one hundred interviews-with patients, parents,
staff, and clinicians. Among the issues she explores are the
relationship between calorie-counting and the management of
consumer desire; why the "typical" anorexic patient is middle-class
and white; the extent to which power differentials among
clinicians, staff, and patients model "anorexic families"; and the
potential of narrative therapy to constructively reframe some of
the problematic assumptions underlying more mainstream treatments.
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