The Metamorphoses of Fat: A History of Obesity (2024)

Online ISBN:

9780231535304

Print ISBN:

9780231159760

Publisher:

Columbia University Press

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Georges Vigarello

Georges Vigarello

C. Jon Delogu

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Oxford Academic

Published:

4 June 2013

Online ISBN:

9780231535304

Print ISBN:

9780231159760

Publisher:

Columbia University Press

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Vigarello, Georges, The Metamorphoses of Fat: A History of Obesity (New York, NY, 2013; online edn, Columbia Scholarship Online, 19 Nov. 2015), https://doi.org/10.7312/columbia/9780231159760.001.0001, accessed 11 June 2024.

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Abstract

This book maps the evolution of Western ideas about fat and fat people from the Middle Ages to the present, paying particular attention to the role of science, fashion, fitness crazes, and public health campaigns in shaping these views. While hefty bodies were once a sign of power, today those who struggle to lose weight are considered poor in character and weak in mind. The book traces the eventual equation of fatness with infirmity and the way we have come to define ourselves and others in terms of body type. The text begins with the medieval artists and intellectuals who treated heavy bodies as symbols of force and prosperity. It then follows the shift during the Renaissance and early modern period to courtly, medical, and religious codes that increasingly favored moderation and discouraged excess. Scientific advances in the eighteenth century also brought greater knowledge of food and the body’s processes, recasting fatness as the “relaxed” antithesis of health. The body-as-mechanism metaphor intensified in the early nineteenth century, with the chemistry revolution and heightened attention to food-as-fuel, which turned the body into a kind of furnace or engine. During this period, social attitudes toward fat became conflicted, with the bourgeois male belly operating as a sign of prestige but also as a symbol of greed and exploitation, while the overweight female was admired only if she was working class. The book concludes with the fitness and body-conscious movements of the twentieth century and the proliferation of personal confessions about obesity, which tied fat more closely to notions of personality, politics, taste, and class.

Keywords: fat, fat people, fatness, infirmity, body type, body-as-mechanism, food-as-fuel, fitness, body-conscious

Subject

Social and Cultural History

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