Weighty Words: Expanding and Embodying the Accounts Framework (original) (raw)

'Its worse for women and girls': negotiating mebodied masculinities through weight-related talk

Helen Malson

2013

View PDFchevron_right

Making and Breaking the Weighted Body: a poststructural reading of obesity discourse

Fiona McLachlan

View PDFchevron_right

Constituting the ideal body: A poststructural analysis of “obesity” discourses among gay men

Phillip Joy

2018

View PDFchevron_right

Men’s weight loss stories: How personal confession, responsibility and transformation work as social control

Gil-Soo Han, Danielle Couch

Health: An Interdisciplinary Journal for the Social Study of Health, Illness and Medicine , 2019

View PDFchevron_right

Big fat inequalities, thin privilege. An intersectional perspective on 'body size'

Noortje Van Amsterdam

2013

View PDFchevron_right

‘Turning On The Lights’ & Disrupting Inspirational Weight Loss Narratives: Analyzing Systemic Fatphobia & Neoliberal Constructs of Health

Meaghen Meaney

2017

View PDFchevron_right

Size Matters: An analysis of the cultural representation of overweight and obesity in contemporary literature and mass-media.

Casper Christoffersen

View PDFchevron_right

Exploring the Politics of Women's In/Visible `Large' Bodies

Helen Malson

Feminism & Psychology, 2008

View PDFchevron_right

Fattening Queer Theory: Review of Queering Fat Embodiment, by Cat Pausé, Jackie Wykes, and Samantha Murray (Editors)

Derek Bolen

2015

View PDFchevron_right

Being Large: An interpretive phenomenological enquiry into the lived world of problematic weight - Doctoral Thesis

Dr Sandra Westland

2016

View PDFchevron_right

The Sociology of Fat

Deborah Lupton

View PDFchevron_right

Undesirable Consequences? Resignifying Discursive Constructions of Fatness in the 'Obesity Epidemic'

Francis Ray White

chapter in: Fat Studies in the UK (eds C. Tomrley & A. Kaloski Naylor, p69-81), 2009

View PDFchevron_right

Heavy: The Obesity Crisis in Cultural Context. By Helene A. Shugart. New York: Oxford University Press, 2016; pp. 232. $36.95 cloth.

Casey Kelly

Rhetoric and Public Affairs, 2020

View PDFchevron_right

X-static process: Intersectionality within the field of fat studies. Fat Studies: An Interdisciplinary Journal of Body Weight and Society, 3 (2), 80-85

Cat Pausé

View PDFchevron_right

Obstinate fatties: Fat activism, queer negativity, and the celebration of ‘obesity’

Vikki Chalklin

Subjectivity, 2016

View PDFchevron_right

Review: Heavy: The Obesity Crisis in Cultural Context

Nathan Stormer

Quarterly Journal of Speech, 2018

View PDFchevron_right

Silences behind the mantra: Critiquing feminist fat

Elspeth Probyn

Feminism & Psychology, 2008

View PDFchevron_right

Between bodies and collectivities: Articulating the action of emotion in obesity epidemic discourse

JaneMaree Maher

Social Theory & Health, 2010

View PDFchevron_right

Justifying Fatness Stigmatization by Animating a Self in Crisis

Susanne Brandheim

Critical Social Work, 2018

View PDFchevron_right

A Qualitative Investigation of Obese Men's Experiences With Their Weight

Paul Komesaroff

American Journal of Health Behavior, 2011

View PDFchevron_right

Squeezed between identity politics and intersectionality: A critique of ‘thin privilege’ in Fat Studies

Meredith Nash

View PDFchevron_right

Chapter 25: The Affective State of Fat-Beingness within Debility Politics

Ramanpreet A . Bahra

View PDFchevron_right

'Moderation, Reward, Entitlement: The "Obesity Epidemic" and the Gendered Body', Fat Studies 3, no. 2 (2014)

Camille Nurka

View PDFchevron_right

Fat is a Sociological Issue: Obesity Rates in Late Modern, ‘Body-Conscious’ Societies

Nick Crossley

Social Theory & Health, 2004

View PDFchevron_right

Book Review of The Weight of Images: Affect, Body Image, and Fat in the Media by Katariina Kyrola (Ashgate Press, 2014). Fat Studies: An Interdisciplinary Journal of Body Weight and Society 4:1, January 2015.

Stefanie Snider

View PDFchevron_right

The Fat Body in Literature: An analysis of obesity in Sapphire's Push and Lee Daniel's Precious, Michael Kimball's Big Ray and Peter Carey's The Fat Man in History

Casper Christoffersen

View PDFchevron_right

“Being ‘thick’ indicates you are eating, you are healthy and you have an attractive body shape”: Perspectives on fatness and food choice amongst Black and White men and women in Canada.

Gwen Chapman, Brenda Beagan

Health Sociology Review , 2010

View PDFchevron_right

Can ambivalence hold potential for fat activism? An analysis of conflicting discourses on fatness in the Finnish column series Jenny’s Life Change

Anna Puhakka

Fat Studies, 2018

View PDFchevron_right

Fat bodies and thin bodies. Cultural, biomedical and market discourses on obesity

Mabel Gracia-Arnaiz

Appetite, 2010

View PDFchevron_right

No Fat Future? The Uses of Anti-Social Queer Theory for Fat Activism

Francis Ray White

chapter in: Queer Futures: Reconsidering Normativity, Activism and the Political (eds E. Haschemi Yekani et al. p21-36), 2013

View PDFchevron_right

Watching Our Weights: The Contradictions of Televising Fatness in the “Obesity Epidemic”

Melissa Zimdars

2019

View PDFchevron_right

Issue "Fat Agency", Body Politics 3/5 (2015) [ed. by Nina Mackert/ Jürgen Martschukat].

Nina Mackert

2015

View PDFchevron_right

Beyond psychopathology: Interrogating (dis)orders of body weight and body management

Helen Malson

Journal of Community & Applied Social Psychology, 2009

View PDFchevron_right

Dangerous Bodies: Blackness, Fatness, and the Masculinity Dividend

Marta Usiekniewicz

View PDFchevron_right

“Materializing Fat,” in Christopher E. Forth and Alison Leitch, eds., Fat: Culture and Materiality (London: Bloomsbury, 2014). proofs

Christopher E Forth

View PDFchevron_right