'Cos girls aren't supposed to eat like pigs are they?' Young women negotiating gendered discursive constructions of food and eating

J Health Psychol. 2012 Jan;17(1):46-56. doi: 10.1177/1359105311406151. Epub 2011 May 24.

Abstract

While psycho-medical understandings of 'eating disorders' draw distinctions between those who 'have'/'do not have' eating disorders, feminist poststructuralist researchers argue that these detract from political/socio-cultural conditions that invoke problematic eating and embodied subjectivities. Using poststructuralist discourse analysis, we examine young women's talk around food and eating, in particular, the negotiation of tensions arising from derogating aspects of hetero-normative femininities, while accounting for own 'feminine' practices (e.g. 'dieting') and subjectivities. Analysis suggested that eating/dieting was accounted for by drawing upon neo-liberalist discourses around individual choice; however, these may obscure gendered, classed and racialized power relations operating in local and wider contexts.

MeSH terms

  • Adolescent
  • Attitude*
  • Child
  • England
  • Feeding Behavior / psychology*
  • Female
  • Femininity
  • Focus Groups
  • Humans
  • Interviews as Topic
  • Self Concept
  • Young Adult