Quick wonder
Jul. 22nd, 2004 11:00 amSo why is anti-thin-people rhetoric more acceptable than anti-fat-people rhetoric now? I come from a family of thin people (I, at size 8 UK/Irish sizing, was The Fat One. When I was born, the nurses admired my fine, powerful thighs). Why do people assume that thin people are anorexic? Isn't that just as bad as assuming that fat people overeat?
(no subject)
Date: 2004-07-22 03:18 am (UTC)Also, I think, perhaps because our diet, lifestyle and body shape - at least in the West - has changed so dramatically in the last fifty years that we are profoundly uncertain about what constitutes health and normality. We are mostly much taller and bigger than our grandparents, and have longer life expectancy, yet are riddled with strange disorders for which they had no name. It's unsettling.
(no subject)
Date: 2004-07-22 03:19 am (UTC)(no subject)
Date: 2004-07-22 03:32 am (UTC)Which isn't quite as bad as the anti-fat-people rethoric which is seen as just being downright mean.
(no subject)
Date: 2004-07-22 03:49 am (UTC)For my own 5c worth, I don't think it's fun at either end of the spectrum. I know it's hard enough at my end, where at least I can go to specialist clothing shops, and find something that I like, which fits me and which doesn't make me look about ninety-two. It must be worse if you're a naturally thin person, and you're condemned to shopping in the kid's section even when you're in your forties. Sadly, society is a bit too body-conscious to want to stop classifying people into their appropriate groups by body shape and size. Roll on the revolution...
(no subject)
Date: 2004-07-22 04:15 am (UTC)(no subject)
Date: 2004-07-22 05:03 am (UTC)Anyway, if I got a pound coin for every time someone makes a 'joke' along the lines of "eat more" (often enough with a plate of pasta in front of me), I'd have a very heavy purse indeed.
That kind of joke doesn't happen towards "overweight" people as far as I can observe. Probably because there some ...vulnerability... is commonly realised.
I think there is a lack of sensitivity to the fact that "thin" people aren't necessarily so by active choice. People (particularly those who are dieting) assume that you are thin because you have dieted even more than they do...
It's weird. But I still think that life is a bit more difficult for the obese than for the very thin in general.
(no subject)
Date: 2004-07-22 05:05 am (UTC)As people -- geeks, mainly -- attempt to become more fat-acceptant, it's real easy to slip, and become anti-thin.
Anti-thin rhetoric isn't more acceptible generally -- just within the segment of the geek community which has been really trying to stop being anti-fat, and overshooting.
(no subject)
Date: 2004-07-22 06:22 am (UTC)I mean, it's not any less wrong than anti-fat rhetoric, but the last time I walked down the street eating ice cream was years ago for a reason.
One day people will stop getting on others' cases for their weight, no matter what, and what a lovely day that will be.
(no subject)
Date: 2004-07-22 07:33 am (UTC)Also, now that it's widely recognized that it's wrong to say mean things about fat women, people think that saying mean thing about thin women is ok because it shows solidarity with fat women.
I've been eating and eating with no concern at all for my health, and went from 160 lbs to 155, at six feet tall.
(no subject)
Date: 2004-07-22 07:38 am (UTC)It all boils down to something (IMO broken) in a culture that makes people think it's OK to denigrate other people for the shape and size of their bodies.
(no subject)
Date: 2004-07-22 09:17 am (UTC)Some anti-thin rhetoric has always been about jealousy that thin people are conventionally attractive. But IMO an increase in anti-thin rhetoric means that a few people have figured out "Oh no, the constant barrage of weight loss messages causes some people to become anorexic," and then they wrongly decide that the way to solve this is to believe that they can personally diagnose anorexia in individual people on the basis of appearance, and helpfully inform those people of the diagnosis because they're Only Trying To Help.
I think this comes from the same helpful impulse that cause people to tell you how to take care of your pregnancy and how to raise your child and so forth.
None of that is acceptable to me.
(no subject)
Date: 2004-07-23 04:03 pm (UTC)I think people sometimes make those kinds of comments around fat people to show some kind of fellowship, but it doesn't work with me... being fat doesn't mean I resent thin people their thinness, nor do I want to put them down for it.
(no subject)
Date: 2004-07-23 06:53 pm (UTC)Also, since one body type is pushed as "mainstream", in some eyes it doesn't have the protections that a minority group would have. And objections to same will be met by some variant of, "Oh yeah, it's so horrible to be seen as desireable by everyone, can't you accept the burden of one little joke" or some such.
-- signed, one of those many people who is "not a real woman" because she's not reubenesque