home *** CD-ROM | disk | FTP | other *** search
- Path: sparky!uunet!think.com!ames!agate!remarque.berkeley.edu!muffy
- From: seid@paxvax.EE.CORNELL.EDU (Steve Seidman)
- Newsgroups: soc.feminism
- Subject: Fasting Girls (a book review)
- Date: 17 Nov 1992 18:43:57 GMT
- Organization: University of California, Berkeley
- Lines: 69
- Sender: muffy@mica.berkeley.edu (Muffy Barkocy)
- Approved: muffy@mica.berkeley.edu
- Distribution: world
- Message-ID: <1ebehdINNmga@agate.berkeley.edu>
- NNTP-Posting-Host: remarque.berkeley.edu
- Originator: muffy@remarque.berkeley.edu
-
- Fasting Girls, by Joan Jacobs Brumberg (professor @ Cornell University)
-
- a book review:
-
- This book is a historian's perspective on the development
- of the modern disease of anorexia nervosa. It traces the
- disease from it's first recognition to the present and shows
- the interplay between the medical community and society
- culture at large. Careful attention is givien to the decline
- of religion, rising materialism, onset of industrial revolution
- and the implication of these on the clothing industry among
- many other things. Here's just one example of the many insights
- in the book. Brumberg demonstrates how mass production led to
- standardized clothing sizes which with the help of new advertising
- helped to reinforce the concept of a "standard physique" (especially
- for women). She indicates that this helped to intensify the nature
- of the already pre-existing eating disorders.
-
- This book is such a rich study it would be impossible to
- summarize it all. I really enjoyed the finesse of balancing class
- analysis, medical history, how religious sentiment got mixed into
- the language of dieting, along with the many insights on the rich
- interplay of culture. I want to emphasize that this book isn't just
- idle speculation but backed up by really solid research, examination
- of archival material,and lots of really interesting historical information.
- Moreover it is fun to read, unusual for academic books geared towards the
- general audience. (Books geared to academic specialists are even more
- likely to be dull, but no one usually seems to raise a fuss about it)
-
- Politically, the first chapter is rather telling. Brumberg
- first summarizes the "popular perception" of the disease along with
- the alarmist kind of statistics in "women's magazines" She then seems
- to subtly distance herself from a lot of these sort of fuzzy stats as
- she embarks on a more convincing sort of historical approach, while claiming
- that she does wish to "be a feminist" One seriously wonders about the
- compatibility of political feminism with academic scholarship in light of
- Brumbergs qualifying introductory chapter.
-
- If there is such a thing as academic feminism then this book most
- assuredly is a real model. And it stands in stark contrast to the recent
- book "Beauty Myth" by Naomi Wolf. Brumberg's book is fequently mentioned
- in Wolf's book, and many of the good ideas in Beauty Myth are lifted
- straight out of "Fasting Girls"....but the original is so much better
- in everyway.
-
- By now, everyone who reads newspapers and mainstream magazines
- and talk shows has heard a lot about anorexia nervosa & bulimia. Most
- are aware that the disease has high mortality rates, causes undue
- suffering, difficult to cure, associated with upper middle class
- white females, onset is near adolescence, and somehow the disease
- can be blamed on "society" But even if you think you've heard it all,
- or "know it all" this book is still highly recommended if only to see
- how delicate ideas about the interplay of culture,medicine,economics
- & psychology/religion can be easily transmuted into a banal and wimpy
- political mush by sensationalist talk show hosts or writers.
-
- reviewer: Steven Seidman
-
- Cornell University
-
- send comments to: seid@ee.cornell.edu
-
-
-
- --
- Post articles to soc.feminism, or send email to feminism@ncar.ucar.edu.
- Questions and comments should be sent to feminism-request@ncar.ucar.edu. This
- newsgroup is moderated by several people, so please use the mail aliases. Your
- article should be posted within several days. Rejections notified by email.
-