TY - JOUR
T1 - Body Mass Index, masculinities and moral worth
T2 - Men's critical understandings of 'appropriate' weight-for-height
AU - Monaghan, Lee F.
PY - 2007/5
Y1 - 2007/5
N2 - Based on the Body Mass Index (BMI, kg/m2), most men in nations such as the UK and USA are reportedly overweight or obese. This is authoritatively defined as a massive and growing problem. Drawing from embodied sociology, critical obesity literature and qualitative data generated during an Economic and Social Research Council funded project on masculinities and weight-related issues, this paper offers a critical realist contribution to the obesity debate. Rather than endorsing the institutionalised war on fat, and correcting so-called 'laymen' who dismiss medicalised weight-for-height recommendations, the following presents and honours men's justificatory accounts for levels of body mass that medicine labels too heavy (implicitly or explicitly too fat). Men's critical understandings, which are connected to their displays of moral worth, are considered under three headings: the compatibility of heaviness, healthiness and physical fitness; looking and feeling ill at a supposedly 'healthy' BMI; and resisting irrational standardisation. By empirically 'bringing in' men's meanings, sensibilities and culturally informed aesthetics, this paper casts a different light on medicalised measures that support potentially corrosive obesity epidemic psychology.
AB - Based on the Body Mass Index (BMI, kg/m2), most men in nations such as the UK and USA are reportedly overweight or obese. This is authoritatively defined as a massive and growing problem. Drawing from embodied sociology, critical obesity literature and qualitative data generated during an Economic and Social Research Council funded project on masculinities and weight-related issues, this paper offers a critical realist contribution to the obesity debate. Rather than endorsing the institutionalised war on fat, and correcting so-called 'laymen' who dismiss medicalised weight-for-height recommendations, the following presents and honours men's justificatory accounts for levels of body mass that medicine labels too heavy (implicitly or explicitly too fat). Men's critical understandings, which are connected to their displays of moral worth, are considered under three headings: the compatibility of heaviness, healthiness and physical fitness; looking and feeling ill at a supposedly 'healthy' BMI; and resisting irrational standardisation. By empirically 'bringing in' men's meanings, sensibilities and culturally informed aesthetics, this paper casts a different light on medicalised measures that support potentially corrosive obesity epidemic psychology.
KW - Body mass index
KW - Embodiment
KW - Fatness
KW - Masculinities
KW - Obesity
KW - Resistance
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=34247559661&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.1111/j.1467-9566.2007.01007.x
DO - 10.1111/j.1467-9566.2007.01007.x
M3 - Review article
C2 - 17498170
AN - SCOPUS:34247559661
SN - 0141-9889
VL - 29
SP - 584
EP - 609
JO - Sociology of Health and Illness
JF - Sociology of Health and Illness
IS - 4
ER -