期刊论文详细信息
Journal of Eating Disorders
A feminist approach to eating disorders in China: a qualitative study
Research
Hua Ma1  Su Holmes1 
[1] Department of Film, TV and Media, University of East Anglia, NR4 7TJ, Norwich, UK;
关键词: China;    Eating disorders;    Feminism;    Transcultural;    Bulimia;    Binge eating disorder;   
DOI  :  10.1186/s40337-023-00883-z
 received in 2023-07-27, accepted in 2023-09-03,  发布年份 2023
来源: Springer
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【 摘 要 】

BackgroundAs women continue to be more at risk from eating disorders, gender has often been a focus of concern in transcultural research. Yet feminist, qualitative studies which prioritize the voices of women/girls remain rare within transcultural work suggesting the need for greater interaction between these fields. This article seeks to contribute to the exploration of the applicability of feminist paradigmslargely developed in the West—to experiences of EDs in non-western contexts.MethodsThis article draws on semi-structured interviews with 12 women from urban China with self-reported experience of Bulimia Nervosa (BN) and binge eating disorder (BED) in order to explore the complex ways in which gender may be implicated within eating/body distress from a transcultural point of view. The data is analysed through Reflexive Thematic Analysis.ResultsThe data analysis suggested two broad themes: (1) Chinese versus Western codes for judging female appearance: from surveillance to liberation (2) Discipline, appetite and control: the gendered/cultural meanings of binging and purging. In terms of the first theme, many participants had spent time in the West which was understood as a less regulated context in terms of gendered body surveillance and eating. Complicating existing assumptions about the ‘Westernisation’ thesis, different communication codes and peer interactions across Chinese and Western contexts played a central role in how participants experienced their bodies. In the second theme, binging and purging emerged as a way to manage a number of contradictions surrounding Chinese femininity, including respecting familial food cultures, contradictory discourses on female ‘appetite’, and the need to display a female body which signified cultural imperatives of self-restraint and discipline.ConclusionsThe data emphasises the importance of examining the culturally specific meanings of eating problems and their gendered contexts, whilst there is clearly much that echoes Western feminist work on Western samples. Although limited, the study crucially points to the importance of examining how ED subcategories other than AN can be explored from a transcultural and feminist point of view.

【 授权许可】

CC BY   
© BioMed Central Ltd., part of Springer Nature 2023

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