Over the past decade there have been significant shifts both in
feminist approaches to the field of eating disorders and in the
ways in which gender, bodies, body weight, body management and food
are understood, represented and regulated within the dominant
cultural milieus of the early twenty-first century.
Critical Feminist Approaches to Eating Dis/Orders addresses
these developments, exploring how eating disordered subjectivities,
experiences and body management practices are theorised and
researched within postmodern and post-structuralist feminist
frameworks.
Bringing together an international range of cutting-edge,
contemporary feminist research and theory on eating disorders, this
book explores how anorexia nervosa, bulimia nervosa and obesity
cannot be adequately understood in terms of individual mental
illness and deviation from the norm but are instead continuous with
the dominant cultural ideas and values of contemporary
cultures.
This book will be essential reading for academic, graduate and
post-graduate researchers with an interest in eating disorders and
critical feminist scholarship, across a range of disciplines
including psychology, sociology, cultural studies and gender
studies as well as clinicians interested in exploring innovative
theory and practice in this field.
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