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The Critical Shapes of Body Image: The Role of Culture and Family in the Production of Eating Disorders

✍ Scribed by Susan Haworth-Hoeppner


Book ID
111299364
Publisher
John Wiley and Sons
Year
2000
Tongue
English
Weight
102 KB
Volume
62
Category
Article
ISSN
0022-2445

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✦ Synopsis


Although research has pointed to the influence of culture and family in the etiology of eating disorders, few studies have examined how these influences conjoin in this process. This research explores how the family mediates cultural ideas about thinness and how the family conveys these messages to family members. Using a grounded theory approach, open‐ended interviews were conducted with 32 White, middle‐class women (with and without eating disorders) on the topic of body image and eating problems. In conjunction with this method, qualitative comparative analysis (QCA) was also performed to identify family characteristics, and their specific combinations, that were associated with eating disorders. The findings indicate that a critical family environment, coercive parental control, and a dominating discourse on weight in the household are salient conditions, and their specific configurations are discussed in relationship to current theoretical conceptualizations regarding the influences of culture and family in the production of eating disorders.


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