an article by Susannah Wilson (Department of French Studies, University of Warwick) published in Exchanges: the Warwick Research Journal
Abstract
This article highlights questions about a number of popularly
held beliefs regarding anorexia nervosa.
The beliefs this article addresses
include that it is a ‘disease’ caused by socio-cultural pressures on women
to be excessively thin or self-effacing; and that in the post-war period the
problem has increased to the level of an epidemic.
Using the influential
insights offered by cultural critic Susan Sontag’s consideration of ‘illness
as metaphor’, the article examines the ways in which these beliefs are
culturally constructed through metaphorical thinking. Without
discounting the socio-cultural explanations for the increased diagnosis of
anorexia, it suggests that the breaking down of these powerful
metaphors would be constructive in order to achieve a more measured
cultural view of the problem.
Drawing on key publications from the last
50 years, contemporary press reports and historical research on anorexia
I argue that the myths surrounding the disorder confer on it a potency
that is out of proportion to its cultural importance.
Continue reading (full text PDF)
No comments:
Post a Comment