ABSTRACT

Increasing obesity levels are currently big news but do we think carefully enough about what this trend actually means? Everybody – including doctors, parents, teachers, sports clubs, businesses and governments – has a role to play in the ‘war on obesity’. But is talk of an obesity ‘crisis’ justified? Is it the product of measured scientific reasoning or age-old ‘habits of mind’? Why is it happening now? And are there potential risks associated with talking about obesity as an ‘epidemic’?

The Obesity Epidemic proposes that obesity science and the popular media present a complex mix of ambiguous knowledge, familiar (yet unstated) moral agendas and ideological assumptions.

chapter 1|15 pages

Science and fatness

chapter 2|21 pages

The war on obesity

chapter 3|31 pages

The ghost of a machine

chapter 4|18 pages

‘Modernity's scourge’

A brief history of obesity science

chapter 5|21 pages

Fat or fiction

Weighing the ‘obesity epidemic’

chapter 6|19 pages

The search for a cause

chapter 9|19 pages

Interrogating expert knowledge

Risk and the ethics of body weight

chapter 10|4 pages

Beyond body weight