Feminist Theology and Contemporary Dieting Culture: Sin, Salvation and Women?s Weight Loss Narratives
 
Product details:

ISBN13:9780567659972
ISBN10:0567659976
Binding:Paperback
No. of pages:360 pages
Size:216x138 mm
Weight:440 g
Language:English
127
Category:

Feminist Theology and Contemporary Dieting Culture

Sin, Salvation and Women?s Weight Loss Narratives
 
Publisher: T&T Clark
Date of Publication:
Number of Volumes: Paperback
 
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Long description:
Hannah Bacon draws on qualitative research conducted inside one UK secular commercial weight loss group to show how Christian religious forms and theological discourses inform contemporary weight-loss narratives. Bacon argues that notions of sin and salvation resurface in secular guise in ways that repeat well-established theological meanings. The slimming organization recycles the Christian terminology of sin - spelt 'Syn' - and encourages members to frame weight loss in salvific terms. These theological tropes lurk in the background helping to align food once more with guilt and moral weakness, but they also mirror to an extent the way body policing techniques in Christianity have historically helped to cultivate self-care. The self-breaking and self-making aspects of women's Syn-watching practices in the group continue certain features of historical Christianity, serving in similar ways to conform women's bodies to patriarchal norms while providing opportunities for women's self-development.

Taking into account these tensions, Bacon asks what a specifically feminist theological response to weight loss might look like. If ideas about sin and salvation service hegemonic discourses about fat while also empowering women to shape their own lives, how might they be rethought to challenge fat phobia and the frenetic pursuit of thinness? As well as naming as 'sin' principles and practices which diminish women's appetites and bodies, this book forwards a number of proposals about how salvation might be performed in our everyday eating habits and through the cultivation of fat pride. It takes seriously the conviction of many women in the group that food and the body can be important sites of power, wisdom and transformation, but channels this insight into the construction of theologies that resist rather than reproduce thin privilege and size-ist norms.
Table of Contents:
Acknowledgments
Introduction: Theology, Food and Fat: a Healthy Recipe?
Chapter One: Syn, Danger, and Disordered Desire
Chapter Two: Syn, Self-surveillance and Taking Care: Tensions and Ambiguities
Chapter Three: Salvation, 'Getting Rid' and 'Getting There'
Chapter Four: Rethinking Sin: Sizeism, the Victimization of Food and the Divided Self
Chapter Five: Rethinking Salvation: a (Re)turn to 'Sensible' Eating
Chapter Six: Rethinking Salvation: Sabbath and Fat Pride
Conclusion: For the Love of Food, for the Love of Fat
Bibliography
Index