2015
DOI: 10.5153/sro.3613
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Physical Cultures of Stigmatisation: Health Policy & Social Class

Abstract: In recent years, the increasing regulation of people's health and bodies has been exacerbated by a contemporary ‘obesity discourse’ centred on eating less, exercising more and losing weight. This paper contributes to the growing body of work critically examining this discourse and highlights the way physical activity and health policy directed at ‘tackling’ the obesity ‘crisis’ in the UK articulates numerous powerful discourses that operate to legitimise and privilege certain ways of knowing and usher forth ce… Show more

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Cited by 20 publications
(11 citation statements)
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References 80 publications
(91 reference statements)
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“…The weight loss industry, fashion industry, government policy and the medicalisation of obesity (Cogan and Ernsberger , Rich et al . ) are all argued to contribute to the structural stigmatisation of obese people. Finally, is the process by which the stigmatised themselves act in ways to reinforce rather than challenge stigma directed at them, by internalising the negative attitudes of others and believing that they deserve to be stigmatised.…”
Section: Distancing the Self From Bodily Abominationmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…The weight loss industry, fashion industry, government policy and the medicalisation of obesity (Cogan and Ernsberger , Rich et al . ) are all argued to contribute to the structural stigmatisation of obese people. Finally, is the process by which the stigmatised themselves act in ways to reinforce rather than challenge stigma directed at them, by internalising the negative attitudes of others and believing that they deserve to be stigmatised.…”
Section: Distancing the Self From Bodily Abominationmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Many of their propositions – such as the notion that obesity may no longer be a highly stigmatised condition – have been questioned (Brown , Rich et al . ) and there are competing explanations for the social patterning of overweight and obesity. These include, for example, the role of classed social practices, the over‐supply of fast food outlets in areas of material disadvantage or the operation of latent classed attitudes (Bissell et al .…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…This work has been the focus of considerable critical attention in relation to the argument that 'obesity may spread in social networks in a quantifiable and discernible pattern that depends on the nature of social ties' (Christakis and Fowler 2007: 377). Many of their propositionssuch as the notion that obesity may no longer be a highly stigmatised conditionhave been questioned (Brown 2013, Rich et al 2015 and there are competing explanations for the social patterning of overweight and obesity. These include, for example, the role of classed social practices, the over-supply of fast food outlets in areas of material disadvantage or the operation of latent classed attitudes (Bissell et al 2016, Foresight Programme 2007, McLaren 2007, Pampel 2012.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…There have also been numerous critiques of obesity from sociologists and feminists adopting very different perspectives (Murray, 2008;Throsby 2007;Monaghan, 2008;Monaghan, 2014;Rich et al, 2015). For example, contemporary Western discourses around femininity and beauty have been seen as privileging small and slender bodies.…”
Section: Obesity: the Wider Contextmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Furthermore, the obese body is usually "classed", with poor and working class bodies embodying much that is problematic. Rich et al (2015) argue: "One of the most powerful forms of stigmatisation and discrimination circulating within contemporary health emerges when the social and cultural tensions of social class intersect with obesity discourse" (2015: 1). This stigmatisation is brought sharply into focus in the context of contemporary health policy in England, where personal responsibility represents the doxic narrative for addressing obesity (and other 'wicked problems'), despite increasing evidence of the shortcomings of individualistic models of 'behaviour' change to address health inequalities (Baum and Fisher, 2014 The attractions of this socially undifferentiated message are obvious to policy makers, who may not want to consider the troubling issue that the unequal distribution of resourcesmaterial and agential may be implicated in obesity and other health conditions (Ulijaszek, 2014;Warin et al, 2015).…”
Section: Shame Stigma and Classed Obesitymentioning
confidence: 99%