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Historicizing Fat In Angloamerican Culture Elena Levynavarro Ed

  • SKU: BELL-9959380
Historicizing Fat In Angloamerican Culture Elena Levynavarro Ed
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Historicizing Fat In Angloamerican Culture Elena Levynavarro Ed instant download after payment.

Publisher: Ohio State University Press
File Extension: PDF
File size: 11.66 MB
Pages: 268
Author: Elena Levy-Navarro (ed.)
ISBN: 9780814211359, 9780814292341, 0814211356, 0814292348
Language: English
Year: 2010

Product desciption

Historicizing Fat In Angloamerican Culture Elena Levynavarro Ed by Elena Levy-navarro (ed.) 9780814211359, 9780814292341, 0814211356, 0814292348 instant download after payment.

Historicizing Fat in Anglo-American Culture, edited by Elena Levy-Navarro, is the first collection of essays to offer a historical consideration of fat bodies in Anglophone culture. The interdisciplinary essays cover periods from the medieval to the contemporary, mapping out a new terrain for historical consideration. These essays question many of the commonplace assumptions that circulate around the category of fat: that fat exists as a natural and transhistorical category; that a premodern period existed which universally celebrated fat and knew no fatphobia; and that the thin, youthful body, as the presumptively beautiful and healthy one, should be the norm by which to judge other bodies.
The essays begin with a consideration of the interrelationship between the rise of weight-watching and the rise of the novel. The essays that follow consider such wide-ranging figures as the fat child’s body as a contested site in post-Blair U.K. and in Lord of the Flies; H. G. Wells; Wilkie Collins’s subversively performative Fosco; Ben Jonson; the voluptuous Lillian Russell; Shakespeare’s Venus and Adonis; the opera diva; and the fat feminist activists of recent San Francisco. In developing their histories in a self-conscious way that addresses the pervasive fatphobia of the present-day Anglophone culture, Historicizing Fat suggests ways in which scholarship and criticism in the humanities can address, resist, and counteract the assumptions of late modern culture.

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