A provocative analysis of fatness as a cultural construct Viewed as
both unhealthy and unattractive, fat people are widely represented
in popular culture and in interpersonal interactions as
revolting--as agents of abhorrence and disgust. Yet if we think
about "revolting" in a different way, Kathleen LeBesco argues, we
can recognize fatness as not simply an aesthetic state or a medical
condition, but a political one. If we think of revolting in terms
of overthrowing authority, rebelling, protesting, and rejecting,
then corpulence carries a whole new weight as a subversive cultural
practice that calls into question received notions about health,
beauty, and nature. Revolting Bodies examines a number of sites of
struggle over the cultural meaning of fatness. The book is grounded
in scholarship on identity politics, the social construction of
beauty, and the subversion of hegemonic medical ideas about the
dangers of fatness. It explains how the redefinition of fat
identities has been undertaken by people who challenge conventional
understandings of nature, health, and beauty and, in so doing,
alter their individual and collective relationships to power.
LeBesco explores how the bearer of a fat body is marked as a failed
citizen, inasmuch as her powers as a worker, shopper, and sexually
"desirable" subject are called into question. At the same time, she
highlights fat fashion, relations among fat, queer, and disability
politics and activism, and online communities as opportunities for
transforming these pejorative stereotypes of fatness. Her
discussion of the long-term ramifications of denying bodily
agency--in effect, letting biological determinism run rampant--has
implications not onlyfor our understanding of fatness but also for
future political practice.
General
Is the information for this product incomplete, wrong or inappropriate?
Let us know about it.
Does this product have an incorrect or missing image?
Send us a new image.
Is this product missing categories?
Add more categories.
Review This Product
No reviews yet - be the first to create one!