
The Current Obesity Epidemic Has Been At The Top Of The National And, Increasingly, Global Public Agenda For The Last Decade, The Subject Of Extensive And Intensive Concern, Scrutiny, And Corrective Efforts From Various Quarters. In The United States, Much Of This Attention Is Predicated On The Official Discourse, Or Story, Of Obesity-that It Is A Matter Of Personal Responsibility, Specifically To The End Of Monitoring And Ensuring Appropriate Caloric Balance. However, Even Though It Continues To Have Cultural Presumption, That Discourse Does Not Resonate With The Populace, Which May Explain Why Efforts Of Redress Have Been Notoriously Ineffective. In This Book, Helene Shugart Places Obesity In Cultural, Political, And Economic Context, Arguing That Current Anxieties Regarding Obesity Reflect The Contemporary Crisis In Neoliberalism, And That The Failure Of The Official Discourse Of Obesity Mirrors The Failure Of Neoliberalism More Broadly: Specifically, To Account For Authenticity, A Powerfully Resonant Cultural Concept Today. She Chronicles A Number Of Competing Discourses Of Obesity That Have Arisen In Response To The Failed Official Discourse, Examining And Evaluating Each In Relation To The Idea Of Authenticity; Assessing The Practical And Behavioral Implications Of Each Discourse For Both Obesity Incidence And Redress; And Establishing The Significance Of Each Discourse For Negotiating Neoliberalism In Crisis More Broadly.
This book investigates why official public health discourses regarding obesity fail to resonate with the populace and how these failures reflect a broader crisis within neoliberal ideology. Helene A. Shugart, a professor of communication, utilizes cultural and political analysis to argue that the prevailing narrative of personal responsibility is insufficient. She posits that the disconnect between official policy and public behavior stems from a failure to address the cultural demand for authenticity, which she explores as a central tension in contemporary society.
What You Will Find
Scope Limits
Scholars in the fields of communication and cultural studies frequently cite this work for its rigorous interrogation of how public health narratives are constructed and contested. Readers often note the academic density of the prose, which is intended for an audience familiar with critical theory and political economy.
Page Count:
248
Publication Date:
2016-01-01
Publisher:
Oxford University Press
ISBN-10:
019021063X
ISBN-13:
9780190210632
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