(To see other currencies, click on price)
MORE ABOUT THIS BOOK
Main description:
This book takes a novel approach to the study of male eating disorders - an area that is often dominated by clinical discourses. The study of eating disorders in men has purportedly suffered from a lack of dedicated attention to personal and socio-cultural aspects. Delderfield tackles this deficiency by spotlighting a set of personal accounts written by a group of men who have experiences of disordered eating. The text presents critical interpretations that aim to situate these experiences in the social and cultural context in which these disorders occur.
This discursive work is underpinned by an eclectic scholarly engagement with social psychology and sociology literature around masculinities, embodiment and fatness, belonging, punishment, stigma, and control; leading to understandings about relationships with food, body and self. This is undertaken with a reflexive element, as the personal intersects with the professional. This text will appeal to students, scholars and clinicians in social sciences, humanities, and healthcare studies, including public health.
Contents:
1. Why Study Men?.- 2. Stoicism and Fugliness.- 3. Fat and the Wrecked Body.- 4. Punishment and Passing.- 5. Control and Colonisation.- 6. Ambivalent Men.
PRODUCT DETAILS
Publisher: Springer (Springer Nature Switzerland AG)
Publication date: December, 2018
Pages: 151
Weight: 454g
Availability: Available
Subcategories: Eating Disorders