Watching Our Weights
200 pages, 6 x 9
15 b-w images
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Release Date:07 Feb 2019
ISBN:9780813593548
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Release Date:07 Feb 2019
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Watching Our Weights

The Contradictions of Televising Fatness in the “Obesity Epidemic”

Rutgers University Press
Winner of the 2020 Gourmand Awards, Food Writing Section, USA​

Watching Our Weights explores the competing and contradictory fat representations on television that are related to weight-loss and health, medicalization and disease, and body positivity and fat acceptance. While television—especially reality television—is typically understood to promote individual self-discipline and expert interventions as necessary for transforming fat bodies into thin bodies, fat representations and narratives on television also create space for alternative as well as resistant discourses of the body. Melissa Zimdars thus examines the resistance inherent within TV representations and narratives of fatness as a global health issue, the inherent and overt resistance found across stories of medicalized fatness, and programs that actively avoid dieting narratives in favor of less oppressive ways of thinking about the fat body. Watching Our Weights weaves together analyses of media industry lore and decisions, communication and health policies, medical research, activist projects, popular culture, and media texts to establish both how television shapes our knowledge of fatness and how fatness helps us better understand contemporary television.  
Well-written and enjoyable to read, Watching Our Weights evaluates the various ways that fatness is portrayed on television. It will make an important contribution to popular culture studies in general and television studies specifically. Esther Rothblum, coeditor of The Fat Studies Reader
Zimdars offers a gripping analysis of fat TV as a site for contesting meanings of health, fatness, and embodiment. Her examination of global trends in televising fatness is meticulously researched. Kathleen A. LeBesco, author of Revolting Bodies?: The Struggle to Redefine Fat Identity
Well-written and enjoyable to read, Watching Our Weights evaluates the various ways that fatness is portrayed on television. It will make an important contribution to popular culture studies in general and television studies specifically. Esther Rothblum, coeditor of The Fat Studies Reader
Zimdars offers a gripping analysis of fat TV as a site for contesting meanings of health, fatness, and embodiment. Her examination of global trends in televising fatness is meticulously researched. Kathleen A. LeBesco, author of Revolting Bodies?: The Struggle to Redefine Fat Identity
MELISSA ZIMDARS is an assistant professor of communication and media at Merrimack College in North Andover, Massachusetts.
 
Contents
1          Televising Fatness
2          Competing Understandings of Fatness
3          Does TV Make You Fat?: Television as Causing and Solving the “Obesity Epidemic”   
4          The Globesity Epidemic: Adapting Weight-Loss Television Around the World
5          Exercising Control and the Illogics of Weight-Loss Television
6          Spectacle, Sympathy, and the Medicalized Disease of “Obesity”    
7          Celebrating Large Bodies on the Small Screen: From Fat Visibility to Fat
Acceptance
8          The Decline of The Biggest Loser      
Acknowledgments
Index  
 
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