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Bodies of Resistance

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This document is a qualitative, philosophical take on how people can resist social constructs around the ideal body type. It also examines adverts that highlight the ideal body type and how they have changed throughout history. Furthermore, this uses a Foucauldian ideology when examining bodies within a cultural space.

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Uploaded on
December 20, 2022
Number of pages
5
Written in
2020/2021
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Class notes
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Hannah heath
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Bodies of Resistance: Resisting discourse

, Discourse (Mills, 2004)

• Many ways to conceptualise discourse(s)

• Depends on discipline and focus

• Discourses are inter-related sets of texts (including the practices of production,
dissemination and reception: i.e., language) that bring an object into being.

• They establish a means to categorise and understand the social world

• Usually understood to be an ‘accepted world view’ (Howson, 2002)- usually one dominant
discourse or set of discourses that are only challenged by a small number of people

• Discourses are embodied (demonstrated/shown) and enacted (active process, not just static,
can be reproduced) in a number of ways, text, talk, images, film, tv, advertisements

• Discourses are used to bring meaning to people’s personal and social worlds

• They are purposeful-there is a social consequence to the way language is used

• Discourses can be overarching and impact on many areas of life

• Discourses can be specific/specifically interpretated within the phenomenon itself

• Discourses can co-exist and interact



Media and Discourse (Lafrance et al., 2015)

• Media is one of the main ways that knowledge is communicated and shaped.

• Media therefore engage in (re)creating wider social discourses

• Review and analysis article focussing on dominant discourses of obesity within the media

• Media can act as a form of “life lessons” (bio-pedagogy) (p. 350), Tries to teach the viewer
about the body, acts as a force or education around the body, especially regarding exercise
and healthy eating

• Media draws on neoliberal concepts, such as,

• The biocitizen, individual responsibility, and risk and risk-aversion

• Taught though

• Moralism, sensationalism, and scientism

• Intersectional concerns

• Gender. Class, and race



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