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Obesity - Cultural and social significance

Obesity - Cultural and social significance: Encyclopedia II - Obesity - Cultural and social significance

Obesity - Culture and obesity. In several human cultures, obesity is associated with attractiveness, strength, and fertility. Some of the earliest known cultural artifacts, known as Venuses, are pocket-sized statuettes representing an obese female figure. Although their cultural significance is unrecorded, their widespread use throughout pre-historic Mediterranean and European cultures suggests a central role for the obese female form in magical rituals, and suggests cult ...

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Obesity, Obesity - Definition, Obesity - Etymology, Obesity - Cultural and social significance, Obesity - Culture and obesity, Obesity - Popular culture, Obesity - Causes, Obesity - Causative factors, Obesity - Evolutionary aspects, Obesity - Neurobiological mechanisms, Obesity - Societal causes, Obesity - Poverty link, Obesity - Complications, Obesity - Therapy, Obesity - Controversies, Obesity - Medicalization of obesity, Obesity - Health effects of obesity, Obesity - Medical responses to obesity, Obesity - Prevalence and public interest, Obesity - Policy responses to obesity, Obesity - Prevalence of obesity in American children

Obesity, Obesity - Causative factors, Obesity - Causes, Obesity - Complications, Obesity - Controversies, Obesity - Cultural and social significance, Obesity - Culture and obesity, Obesity - Definition, Obesity - Etymology, Obesity - Evolutionary aspects, Obesity - Health effects of obesity, Obesity - Medical responses to obesity, Obesity - Medicalization of obesity, Obesity - Neurobiological mechanisms, Obesity - Policy responses to obesity, Obesity - Popular culture, Obesity - Poverty link, Obesity - Prevalence and public interest, Obesity - Prevalence of obesity in American children, Obesity - Societal causes, Obesity - Therapy, Fat acceptance movement, Fat admirer, Feederism, Chubby culture, MOMO syndrome, Pickwickian syndrome, Healthy eating, Dieting, Super Size Me, List of famous overweight people, List of the Most Obese Humans

Obesity: Encyclopedia II - Obesity - Cultural and social significance



Obesity - Cultural and social significance

Obesity - Culture and obesity

In several human cultures, obesity is associated with attractiveness, strength, and fertility. Some of the earliest known cultural artifacts, known as Venuses, are pocket-sized statuettes representing an obese female figure. Although their cultural significance is unrecorded, their widespread use throughout pre-historic Mediterranean and European cultures suggests a central role for the obese female form in magical rituals, and suggests cultural approval of (and perhaps reverence for) this body form.

In contrast, in modern Western Culture, a more slender body shape is more typically considered desirable. Although "thinness" is often considered more important for women than men.

Obesity was occasionally considered a symbol of wealth and status in cultures prone to food shortages or famine. Well into the early modern period in European cultures, it often served this role. But as food security was realised, it came to serve more as a visible signifier of "lust for life", appetite, and immersion in the realm of the erotic. This was especially the case in the visual arts, such as the paintings of Rubens (1577–1640), whose regular use of the full female figures gives us the description Rubenesque for plumpness. Obesity can also be seen as symbol for a system of prestige. "The kind of food, the quantity, and the manner in which it is served are among the important criteria of social class. In most tribal societies, even those with a highly stratified social system, everyone - royalty and the commoners - ate the same kind of food, and if there was famine everyone was hungry. With the ever increasing diversity of foods, food has become not only a matter of social status, but also a mark of one's personality and taste."[4]

Not all contemporary cultures disapprove of obesity, although the Western preference for thinness is increasingly being exported worldwide as part of the process of globalization. Few cultures have escaped the "Westernization" of body shape preference, though cultures which are traditionally more approving (to varying degrees), include some African, Arabic, Indian, and Pacific Island cultures. Especially in the past decades, obesity has come to be seen more as a medical condition. There is also a small but vocal fat acceptance movement, which seeks to challenge weight-based discrimination.

Obesity - Popular culture

Various stereotypes of obese people have found their way into expressions of popular culture. A common stereotype is the obese character who has a warm and dependable personality, presumedly in compensation for social exclusion, but equally common is the obese vicious bully. Gluttony and obesity are commonly depicted together in works of fiction. In cartoons, obesity is used to comedic effect, with fat cartoon characters having to squeeze through narrow spaces, frequently getting stuck, or even exploding.

It can be argued that depiction in popular culture adds to and maintains commonly perceived stereotypes, in turn harming self esteem of obese people. A charge of discrimination on the basis of appearance could be leveled against these depictions.

On the other hand, obesity is often associated with positive characteristics such as good humor (the stereotype of the jolly fat man like Santa Claus), and some people are more sexually attracted to obese people than to slender people (see chubby culture, fat admirer).

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10 March, 1577, 1640, 1651, 1960, 1970s, 1980, 1994, 19th century, 2001, 2004, Adolphe Quetelet, African, African-American, American College of Physicians, American Institute for Cancer Research, American Medical Association, Asians, Australia, BMI, Belgian, Canada, Cardiovascular, Cheeseburger Bill, China, Chubby culture, Classical Latin, Cyprus, Czech Republic, Depression, Dieting, Eating disorders, Egypt, Endocrine, English, Europe, European Union, Fat acceptance movement, Fat admirer, Feederism, Finland, Gastrointestinal, Genetic, Genetic disorders, Germany, Gluttony, Greece, Greg Critser, Gulf War, HMO, Healthy eating, Integument, International Obesity Task Force, John F Kennedy, July 16, King's College London, Latin, Learning theory, Lesion studies, List of famous overweight people, List of the Most Obese Humans, MOMO syndrome, Malta, McDonalds, Mexico, National Institutes of Health, Neuroscientific, Osteoporosis, PYY 3-36, Paul Campos, Pickwickian syndrome, Polymorphisms, Polynesian, Prader-Willi syndrome, Psychological, Reagan, Rene Dubos, Respiratory, Roux-en-Y gastric bypass surgery, Rubens, Santa Claus, Second World War, Slovakia, Smoking cessation, Stressful, Sugar, Super Size Me, The Times, Therapy, Tommy Thompson, United States, United States Department of Health and Human Services, Venuses, WHO, above, acanthosis nigricans, addiction, adipokine, adipokines, adiponectin, adipose tissue, adjustable gastric band, advertising, advertorials, anorectic, anti-diabetic drug, appetite, arcuate nucleus, arrhythmia, asthma, atherosclerosis, baby boom, bariatric surgery, binge eating disorder, body fat, body mass index, breast cancer, bully, bupropion, candy, carbuncles, cardiovascular disease, carpal tunnel syndrome, cartoon, causation, cellulitis, central obesity, cholecystokinin, cholelithiasis, chubby culture, class, clinical practice guideline, colorectal cancer, combined hyperlipidemia, computer, congestive heart failure, cor pulmonale, corn syrup, correlated, correlations, dementia, diabetes, diabetes mellitus, diabetes mellitus type 2, diabetics, diet, diethylpropion, discrimination, disease of affluence, diseases, domestic animals, drugs, dumping, dyspnea, enlarged heart, epidemiological, erotic, exercise, fast food, fat acceptance movement, fat admirer, fatty liver disease, fatty tissue, fluoxetine, food energy, gastroesophageal reflux disease, genes, genitourinary, ghrelin, glomerulopathy, gout, headache, hernia, high blood cholesterol, high blood pressure, homeostatic, homosexuality, humans, hyperuricemia, hypogonadism, hypothalamus, hypothyroidism, hypoventilation, impedance, infertility, inflammatory state, insulin, insulin resistance, intertrigo, kg, kilojoules, kitchen, laparoscopically, leptin, lipase, low back pain, lymphedema, m2, malabsorption, males, mammals, medication, menstrual, meralgia paresthetica, metabolic syndrome, metabolism, metformin, microbiologist, microwave oven, mineral oil, morbidity, mortality, nutrition, obstructive sleep apnea, orexin, orlistat, osteoarthritis, overfed, pancreatic, pathophysiological, petrol, pets, phentermine, pigs, pioglitazone, policy, polycystic ovarian syndrome, prejudice, prothrombotic, public health, public transit, pulmonary embolism, restaurants, rosiglitazone, scientific evidence, self esteem, sertraline, sexually attracted, sibutramine, side-effects, sidewalks, sleep, sleep apnea, smoking, snacking, spurious relationship, stereotypes, stillbirth, stomach, stomach stapling, stretch marks, stroke, subcutaneous, substance abuse, sulfonylurea, symbol, thiazolidinediones, topiramate, triglyceride levels, underexercised, underweight, urinary incontinence, uterine cancer, varicose veins, ventromedial hypothalamus, weight loss, weight-loss surgery, wild animals, zonisamide



Adapted from the Wikipedia article "Cultural and social significance", under the G.N U Free Docmentation License. Please also see http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki

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