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Susan Bordo Never Just Pictures Summary

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In “Never Just Pictures,” Susan Bordo discusses the obsession with body image in the media. She begins with an example of Alicia Silverstone; when she appeared at the Academy Awards with a little added weight, the tabloids viciously slammed her. Not only this, but the media regularly attacks women with constant diet pill and plan ads in magazines, in newspapers, on TV, and even in public areas. These advertisements usually have a woman clad in a bikini on the cover. Magazines always have a new miracle diet advertised on their cover. The media affects young minds beyond what one may believe.
She references a study that asked boys and girls of ages ten and eleven to rank drawings of kids with physical handicaps; the kids that were overweight got the worst ratings. The ideas that children have carry over into adulthood. She goes on to discuss eating disorders. Acceptable weights have fallen to smaller and smaller sizes. Boney has become the new sexy in fashion. She references models like Kate Moss, Trish Goff, and Annie Morton, all of whom have brought back the skinny look. She mentions that men are beginning to look skinnier and skinnier in ads as well.
She goes beyond simply criticizing the pressure to lose weight and begins to attack …show more content…

She gives statistics over the increase in eating disorders in minorities. She also states that the gender gap is closing; a swelling number of men are being diagnosed with eating disorders. She reflects over the conflicting ideals of Western culture: binge on desires, but maintain self-control. Westen philosophy sees the body as a source of weakness and vulnerability, but it is also a person’s temple. The skinny models create ideas of self-control, to live without desire. She states that an image of death, drug addicts, and dislocation from the world has become desirable. Zoe Fleischauer reinforced this statement, stating that agencies like skinny, ‘fucked-up’

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