Revolting Bodies?: The Struggle to Redefine Fat Identity

Revolting Bodies?: The Struggle to Redefine Fat Identity

by Kathleen A. LeBesco
Revolting Bodies?: The Struggle to Redefine Fat Identity

Revolting Bodies?: The Struggle to Redefine Fat Identity

by Kathleen A. LeBesco

Paperback(First Edition)

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Overview

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 only for our understanding of fatness but also for future political practice.

Product Details

ISBN-13: 9781558494299
Publisher: University of Massachusetts Press
Publication date: 12/16/2003
Edition description: First Edition
Pages: 192
Product dimensions: (w) x (h) x 0.50(d)

About the Author

Kathleen LeBesco is assistant professor of communication arts at Marymount Manhattan College.

Table of Contents

Acknowledgmentsvii
Introduction: The Discourse of Revolt1
1.Organization and Embodiment: Politicizing and Historicizing Fatness10
2.Antidotes to Medical Discourse about Fatness29
3.Sexy/Beautiful/Fat40
4.Citizen Profane: Consumerism, Class, Race, and Body54
5.Revolution on a Rack: Fatness, Fashion, and Commodification65
6.Framing Fatness: Popular Representations of Obesity as Disability74
7.The Queerness of Fat85
8.The Resignification of Fat in Cyberspace98
9.Fat Politics and the Will to Innocence111
Notes125
References143
Index153

What People are Saying About This

Esther D. Rothblum

Most of the prior literature in this field has consisted of isolated studies published in medical journals that show that diets don't work and that the general public has extremely negative views about fat people. It is time that the discourse about fat oppression looks more closely at sociocultural issues, and that is the focus of LeBesco's book. This is a significant contribution to the fields of women's studies, health, medicine, and all social sciences.

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