1st Edition

The Thin Woman Feminism, Post-structuralism and the Social Psychology of Anorexia Nervosa

By Helen Malson Copyright 2024
260 Pages
by Routledge

260 Pages
by Routledge

260 Pages
by Routledge

The First Edition of The Thin Woman , first published in 1998, provides an in-depth discussion of anorexia nervosa from a critical feminist social psychological standpoint. In the original text, the author argues that the notion of 'anorexia' as a medical condition limits our understanding of anorexia and the extent to which we can explore it as a socially and discursively produced problem.... Read more

Part I Towards a Feminist Post-Structuralist Perspective  1 Theorizing Women: Discoursing Gender, Subjectivity and Embodiment  2 Discourse, Feminism, Research and the Production of Truth  Part II Instituting the Thin Woman: The Discursive Productions of ‘Anorexia Nervosa’  3 A Genealogy of ‘Anorexia Nervosa’  4 Discoursing Anorexias in the Late Twentieth Century  Part III Women’s Talk? Productions of the Anorexic Body in Popular Discourse  5 The Thin/Anorexic Body and the Discursive Production of Gender  6 Subjectivity, Embodiment and Gender in a Discourse of Cartesian Dualism  7 Anorexia and the Discursive Production of the Self  8 Discursive Self-Production and Self-Destruction

 

Biography

Helen Malson is an Associate Professor in Social Psychology and a supervisor and tutor on the Graduate Diploma in Psychology Advanced program at Monash University, Australia. She is a former Consulting Editor of Feminism & Psychology, a Past Chair of the Psychology of Women and Equalities Section of the British Psychological Society and, until 2022 when she moved from the UK to Western Australia, a Co-Director of the Bristol Eating Disorders Health Integration Team.