While public rhetoric about health threats and the so-called obesity epidemic circulate widely, the work of protecting, promoting, and embodying health remains closely linked to femininity. link to the article: https://t.co/I2JiQU4CAE
@jmkorhonen And here's another one. Much of the other stuff I've read take the same data as I and somehow end up to result: neoliberalism. https://t.co/NW4yU4XIF6
For more on how food restrictions are framed as positive "healthy" choices, check out our piece on the "do-diet." https://t.co/Opa7eXcW15
Another example of the "do-diet": body pressures persist, but framed as an empowering choice. http://t.co/XEavpMdpAG https://t.co/zzOjmEPAEv
The “do-diet” remediates tension in neoliberal consumer culture btw dietary control and consumer choice http://t.co/xyWNd5WGNo #foodculture
Cairns & Johnston, "Choosing health: embodied neoliberalism, postfeminism, and the “do-diet”” http://t.co/COevImEG90 @NevrDietAgnUK
The “do-diet” remediates tension in neoliberal consumer culture btw dietary control and consumer choice http://t.co/xyWNd5WGNo #foodculture
From “dieting” to “healthy eating” - still policing femininities. My latest w Josee Johnston in the new Theory&Soc. http://t.co/gSu0eVvx5Z
Analyzing #neoliberalism and #postfeminism in the shift from “dieting” to “healthy eating”. http://t.co/7RTc5p2DOH