首页
外语
计算机
考研
公务员
职业资格
财经
工程
司法
医学
专升本
自考
实用职业技能
登录
外语
Fat Stigma Spreads Around the Globe In Mexico, the latest anti-obesity (肥胖) public health campaign shows people with bulging
Fat Stigma Spreads Around the Globe In Mexico, the latest anti-obesity (肥胖) public health campaign shows people with bulging
admin
2012-01-27
61
问题
Fat Stigma Spreads Around the Globe
In Mexico, the latest anti-obesity (肥胖) public health campaign shows people with bulging (鼓 起的) stomachs eating oily food.
"I have always thought that it’s your own fault," said Sergio Miranda, 35, who has a shoeshine stand in Mexico City. "People eat just things that make them fat, like bread and pizza."
Mr. Miranda said he did not really notice whether his clients were fat or not. But he does when he is in a crowded city bus.
"The fatties take up a lot of space," he said. "People are annoyed. It’s uncomfortable."
At a time when global health officials are stepping up efforts to treat obesity as a worrisome public health threat, some researchers are warning of a troubling side effect: growing stigma (耻辱) against fat people.
"Of all the things we could be exporting to help people around the world, really negative body image and low self-esteem are not what we hope is going out with public health messaging," said Alexandra Brewis, executive director of the School of Human Evolution and Social Change at Arizona State University.
Dr. Brewis and her colleagues recently completed a multicountry study intended to give a snapshot of the international Zeitgeist about weight and body image. The findings were troubling, suggesting that negative perceptions about people who are overweight may soon become the cultural norm in some countries, including places where plumper, larger bodies traditionally have been viewed as attractive, according to a new report in the journal Current Anthropology.
The researchers elicited answers of true or false to statements with varying degrees of fat stigmatization. The fat-stigma test included statements like, "People are overweight because they are lazy" and "Some people are fated to be obese."
Using mostly in-person interviews, supplemented with questions posed over the Internet, they tested attitudes among 700 people in 10 countries, territories and cities, including American Samoa, Tanzania, Mexico, Puerto Rico, Paraguay, Argentina, New Zealand, Iceland, two sites in Arizona and London.
Dr. Brewis said she fully expected high levels of fat stigma to show up in the "Anglosphere" countries, including the United States, England and New Zealand, as well as in body-conscious Argentina. But what she did not expect was how strongly people in the rest of the testing sites expressed negative attitudes about weight. The results, Dr. Brewis said, suggest a surprisingly rapid "globalization of fat stigma."
"The change has come very, very fast in all these places," she said.
To be sure, jokes and negative perceptions about weight have been around for ages. In Mexico, for instance, a nickname (绰号) like "gordo" which translates as "fatty," raises no eyebrows.
But what appears to have changed is the level of criticism and blame leveled at people who are overweight. One reason may be that public health campaigns branding obesity as a disease are sometimes perceived as being critical of individuals rather than the environmental and social factors that lead to weight gain.
"A lot of the negative health messages have a lot of negative moral messages that go with them," Dr. Brewis said.
Surprisingly, stigma scores were high in places that have historically held more positive views of larger bodies, including Puerto Rico and American Samoa.
Stephen McGarvey, a professor of community health at Brown University who studies Samoan health issues, noted that 25 years ago, Samoan study subjects living in Samoa and New Zealand who viewed thin and large body silhouettes (轮廓) mostly had positive feelings about bigger bodies. (The exception was young, educated women, who showed a preference for slimmer silhouettes.)
Dr. McGarvey said that more extensive study was needed to determine just how much that had changed, and that it was important that public health campaigns intended to curb diabetes and high blood pressure did not end up creating negative images of overweight individuals.
"A public health focus on ’You can change,’ or ’This is your fault,’ can be very counterproductive," he said. "Stigma is serious."
What is not clear from the new research is how pervasive fat stigma has become. With only 700 people included, the study is not a representative sample of each country and reflects only a snapshot of cultural attitudes in the area studied. In addition, the research looked only at selected locales and did not include any Asian or Arab countries.
In India, for instance, being overweight or obese is associated with being middle class or wealthy, said Scott Lear, associate professor for health sciences at Simon Fraser University in Vancouver. Even so, Dr. Lear, who is studying rising childhood obesity in that country and in Canada, agrees the potential for stigmatization exists. "We know in developed countries that obese people are less successful, less likely to get married, less likely to get promoted," he said.
Nisha Somaia, 38, who lives in New Delhi and pioneered the first plus-size women’s clothing stores in India, said criticism against people who are large was often direct and open. In India, she said: "Fat equals lazy. Fat equals comedy relief."
The fashion industry, Ms. Somaia said, seems to promote the ideal of beauty as having a body "like an adolescent boy."
"I think all around the ideal of beauty is skinny thin," she said. "I had a highly educated friend confess that she would prefer for her children to be anorexic rather than overweight."
Marianne Kirby of Orlando, Fla., who writes the fat-acceptance blog TheRotund.com, said the apparent spread of fat stigma was not surprising, given the global push to brand obesity as a major health threat.
"The fundamental message we’re putting into the world is that fat people deserve shame for their own health," said Ms. Kirby, co-author of the book Lessons from the Fat-o-Sphere. "We’ve been pushing this message for a long time. I don’t think anyone is immune to it."
Dr. Brewis notes that far more study is needed to determine the extent of fat stigma and how it is affecting the lives of individuals. She noted that her study was designed only to detect cultural views of obesity and did not show whether people were experiencing more social or workplace discrimination as a result of the growing fat stigma.
"I think the next big question is whether it’s going to create a lot of new suffering where suffering didn’t exist before," Dr. Brewis said. "I think it’s important that we think about designing health messages around obesity that don’t exacerbate the problem."
The study conducted by Dr. Brewis and her colleagues indicated that in some countries______.
选项
A、people who are overweight or obese tend to be very lazy
B、negative attitude about fat people may soon become the norm
C、culture has strong influence on people’s perceptions of obesity
D、the public start to treat people with bigger bodies in a positive way
答案
B
解析
该段首句提到,Brewis博士和她的同事们最近完成了一项多国研究,旨在描绘全世界的人们对体重和身体形象的时代思潮的映像。接着说到,其研究结果令人担忧,在一些国家,对肥胖者的负面看法正成为文化常态。[B]。negative attitude about fat people may soon become the norm是对文中的negative perceptions about people who are overweight may soon become the cultural norm的同义转述,故答案为[B]。
转载请注明原文地址:https://kaotiyun.com/show/qdy7777K
0
大学英语四级
相关试题推荐
Manypeopleinvestedinthestockmarket___________(希望能发财).
A、Joiningrunningclubs.B、Readingbooksandmagazines.C、Joggingandrunning.D、Goinginforallkindsofsports.C推理判断题。第二段第二、
Weliveinasocietyinthereisalotoftalkabout【M1】______science,butIwouldsaythattherearenot5perce
A、Theyarenotwelleducated.B、Theyfailedtoworkhardatschool.C、Thesocietyistoocomplicated.D、Whattheylearnedinthe
Inrecentyearn,Israeliconsumershavegrownmoredemandingasthey’vebecomewealthierandmoreworldly-wise.Foreigntraveli
Onedayapoliceofficermanagedtogetsomefreshmushrooms.Hewasso【C1】______whathehadboughtthatheofferedto【C2】______
ThoughtsofsuicidehauntedAnitaRutnamlongbeforeshearrivedatSyracuseUniversity.Shehadahistoryofmentalillnessand
A、Friesian.B、French.C、Finnish.D、Flemish.B此题考听细节的能力。解题的关键是要抓住“resultedinasignedversionofspokenFrench”这句话,并要明白问句中的“sym
Ilovetravelingbytrain.Fast【B1】______,slowlocaltrainswhichstopateverystation,【B2】______trainstakingbusinessmento
A、ahouse.B、acar.C、ahotel.D、anartgallery.A此题考查听细节的能力,且细节与选项为同义替换,‘property’这里指‘房子,房产’对应选项A。I’mgladthatyouhavedecid
随机试题
语法现象可以分成“核心语法现象”和“外围语法现象”,其中“核心语法现象”主要是指()
患者,女,20岁。全身水肿1个月,查血压120/70mmHg,尿蛋白3.8g/L,尿红细胞0~2个/HP,临床诊断为肾病综合征,下列支持其诊断所必需的是
足阳明胃经的循行是
A、丙酮B、正丁醇C、氯仿D、甲醛碘量法测定地西泮注射液的含量时,选用( )为掩蔽剂。
关于反担保的说法,正确的是()。(2011年单项选择第8题)
混凝土拌合物的坍落度评定应以()的测值为准。
附注是对在资产负债表、利润表、现金流量表和所有者权益变动表等报表中列示项目的文字描述或明细资料,以及对未能在这些报表中列示项目的说明等。()
随着中国特色社会主义建设事业的不断发展,中国梦已经成为当下中国人对自己未来的期许和追求。但是,在当今世界,涵盖经济、政治、社会生活、价值文化等领域在内的“软实力”竞争越来越激烈,某发达国家对中国快速发展的疑虑和猜忌明显加重,“中国威胁论”在一些周边国家也有
1,8,9,4,(),1/6
需求分析阶段的任务是()。
最新回复
(
0
)