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8 - ‘A Disease of the Poor’? Obesity and Social Class

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  16 November 2021

Gavin Brookes
Affiliation:
Lancaster University
Paul Baker
Affiliation:
Lancaster University
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Summary

In this chapter, obesity representations are analysed in terms of the ways they intersect with discourses around social class. Specifically, the analysis focuses on the representation of four social class groups: i) upper class, ii) middle class, iii) working class and iv) underclass. The analysis points to a range of ways in which representations of these specific social class groups intersect with and contribute towards the broader representation of obesity. These representations are complex, with few straightforward patterns. However, generally, there are telling differences between newspapers with different political leanings. While those on the left of the political spectrum argue for the role of social inequality as a contributing factor in the development of obesity, those on the right argue that obesity is something that is not influenced by social class, as it exists at all class levels. Instead, newspapers to the political right argue that obesity results from individual factors, such as lack of self-control and over-dependence on the ‘nanny state’.

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Chapter
Information
Obesity in the News
Language and Representation in the Press
, pp. 203 - 228
Publisher: Cambridge University Press
Print publication year: 2021

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