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Title: | Beautiful, moral, functional : bodily self-alteration in an Italian center for eating disorders |
Other Titles: | Self-alteration : how people change themselves across cultures |
Authors: | Orsini, Gisella |
Keywords: | Eating disorders -- Italy Beauty, Personal Patients -- Italy Mental health -- Italy |
Issue Date: | 2023 |
Publisher: | Rutgers University Press |
Citation: | Orsini, G. (2023). Beautiful, moral, functional : bodily self-alteration in an Italian center for eating disorders. In J.-P. Baldacchino, & C. Houston (Eds.), Self-alteration : how people change themselves across cultures (pp. 111-127). New Jersey: Rutgers University Press. |
Abstract: | Only in the twentieth century, especially since the 1960s, has the slender body replaced other concepts of female beauty in the West (Hesse-Biber 1996 ). Many streams of feminism initially supported this new aesthetic ideal of the thin woman, seeing in thinness a powerful and symbolic way to express a rebellion against domesticity and patriarchy (Brown and Jasper 1993). Paradoxically, however, rather than a statement of freedom, the pursuit of slenderness soon became a straitjacket for women. It is not surprising, therefore, that popular contemporary understandings and representations of eating disorders, particularly anorexia nervosa, often associate such conditions with an obsessive and self-oppressive quest for thinness. |
URI: | https://www.um.edu.mt/library/oar/handle/123456789/118718 |
ISBN: | 1978837224 |
Appears in Collections: | Scholarly Works - FacArtAS |
Files in This Item:
File | Description | Size | Format | |
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Beautiful_moral_functional_bodily_self_alteration_in_an_Italian_center_for_eating_disorders_2023.pdf Restricted Access | 6.93 MB | Adobe PDF | View/Open Request a copy |
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