Fat: A Cultural History of ObesityISBN: 978-0-7456-4441-7
Paperback
200 pages
September 2008, Polity
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Tribune
"This book will be useful to students of culture and social
identity, concentrating as it does on the historical debates
surrounding obesity."
Times Higher Education
"[Fat] offers an engaging and suggestive reading with
which all historians of fat, food, and modern dietary regimes will
want to engage."
H-Net: Humanities and Social Science Reviews
Online
"Sander Gilman makes a nuanced and richly documented argument
about the historical, cultural, and scientific contingency of
concepts such as 'fat', 'obesity', and 'health'. This book is a
powerful demonstration of how moralistic prejudices influence
public health discourse, and our ideas of what constitutes diseases
and epidemics. It is an invaluable contribution to the contemporary
interdisciplinary critique of our moral panic over fat."
Paul Campos, University of Colorado
"In Fat, Sander Gilman artfully skewers the cultural
tropes and myths surrounding one of the leading moral panics of our
time - America's so-called obesity epidemic. Gilman unearths the
hidden agendas and historical precedents that allow for our growing
weight to be labelled as a deadly disease. Through his wit and
erudition, Fat is an invaluable perspective for anyone
wanting a more nuanced perspective about health, culture, and
society."
Eric Oliver, University of Chicago, author of Fat
Politics