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      Family, Culture, and Self in the Development of Eating Disorders
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      Book

      Family, Culture, and Self in the Development of Eating Disorders

      DOI link for Family, Culture, and Self in the Development of Eating Disorders

      Family, Culture, and Self in the Development of Eating Disorders book

      Family, Culture, and Self in the Development of Eating Disorders

      DOI link for Family, Culture, and Self in the Development of Eating Disorders

      Family, Culture, and Self in the Development of Eating Disorders book

      BySusan Haworth-Hoeppner
      Edition 1st Edition
      First Published 2016
      eBook Published 15 August 2016
      Pub. Location New York
      Imprint Routledge
      DOI https://doi.org/10.4324/9781315639475
      Pages 206
      eBook ISBN 9781315639475
      Subjects Social Sciences
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      Haworth-Hoeppner, S. (2016). Family, Culture, and Self in the Development of Eating Disorders (1st ed.). Routledge. https://doi.org/10.4324/9781315639475

      ABSTRACT

      This book takes a unique approach to the examination of the eating disorder, anorexia nervosa (and bulimia). White, middle-class, heterosexual women share their insights into the emergence of their illnesses through detailed interviews that consider perceptions of the role of family, the influence of cultural messages regarding thinness and beauty, the agency these women exert in the use of weight control to cope with life’s stressors, the meaning they attach to their eating disorders and how these issues together perpetuate their disease.

      The book uses a Symbolic Interactionist framework and a grounded theory approach to examine the narratives which emerge from these women’s stories. Themes of family, culture, and self arise in their narratives; these form the theoretical underpinnings for this book, and combine to shape the comprehensive model of eating disorders that emerges from this study. Haworth-Hoeppner’s book will appeal to researchers and advanced students of sociology, women’s studies, family studies, social psychology, and gender studies.

      TABLE OF CONTENTS

      chapter |10 pages

      Introduction

      chapter 1|29 pages

      The Cultural Milieu of Physical Attractiveness

      chapter 2|30 pages

      Anorexia (and Bulimia)

      What the Research Reveals

      chapter 3|16 pages

      Theorizing Anorexia (and Bulimia)

      chapter 4|27 pages

      Anorexic (and Bulimic) Families

      Perfect and Overprotective

      chapter 5|29 pages

      Anorexic (and Bulimic) Families

      Chaotic and Other Familial Dynamics

      chapter 6|36 pages

      Anorexia (Bulimia) and the Individual

      chapter 7|7 pages

      Eating Disorders

      A Sociological Conclusion
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