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Feeding Desire: Fatness and Beauty in the Sahara

Paperback

Main Details

Title Feeding Desire: Fatness and Beauty in the Sahara
Authors and Contributors      By (author) Rebecca Popenoe
Physical Properties
Format:Paperback
Pages:256
Dimensions(mm): Height 234,Width 156
Category/GenreDiets and dieting
ISBN/Barcode 9780415280969
ClassificationsDewey:306.4
Audience
General
Professional & Vocational
Tertiary Education (US: College)
Illustrations 8 b&w photographs and 2 line drawings

Publishing Details

Publisher Taylor & Francis Ltd
Imprint Routledge
Publication Date 29 October 2003
Publication Country United Kingdom

Description

While the Western world adheres to a beauty ideal that says women can never be too thin, the semi-nomadic Moors of the Sahara desert have for centuries cherished a feminine ideal of extreme fatness. Voluptuous immobility is thought to beautify girls' bodies, hasten the onset of puberty, heighten their sexuality and ripen them for marriage. From the time of the loss of their first milk teeth, girls are directed to eat huge bowls of milk and porridge in one of the world's few examples of active female fattening. Based on fieldwork in an Arab village in Niger, Feeding Desire analyses the meanings of women's fatness as constituted by desire, kinship, concepts of health, Islam, and the crucial social need to manage sexuality. By demonstrating how a particular beauty ideal can only be understood within wider social structures and cultural logics, the book also implicitly provides a new way of thinking about the ideal of slimness in late Western capitalism. Offering a reminder that an estimated eighty per cent of the world's societies prefer plump women, this gracefully written book is both a fascinating exploration of the nature of bodily ideals and a highly readable ethnography of a Saharan people.

Author Biography

Rebecca Popenoe is Visiting Lecturer in Anthropology at Uppsala University in Sweden. She received her Ph.D. from the University of Chicago and has taught at the University of Virginia and Middlebury College in the U.S. as well as at Stockholm and Linkoping Universities in Sweden.

Reviews

"This is a very readable text, at times almost a 'travel' book, with wonderfully written descriptions that will also appeal to a non-academic readership. Although the theoretical and methodological discussions are quite seamlessly integrated, there is no question that this is a scholarly work. Popendoe's research is thorough, her analysis comprehensive, and the result is a most interesting and welcome contribution to social studies of the body."-The Canadian Review of Sociology and Anthropology