Weighing In takes on the "obesity epidemic," challenging many widely
held assumptions about its causes and consequences. Julie Guthman
examines fatness and its relationship to health outcomes to ask if our
efforts to prevent "obesity" are sensible, efficacious, or ethical. She
also focuses the lens of obesity on the broader food system to
understand why we produce cheap, over-processed food, as well as why we
eat it. Guthman takes issue with the currently touted remedy to
obesity--promoting food that is local, organic, and farm fresh. While
such fare may be tastier and grown in more ecologically sustainable
ways, this approach can also reinforce class and race inequalities and
neglect other possible explanations for the rise in obesity, including
environmental toxins. Arguing that ours is a political economy of
bulimia--one that promotes consumption while also insisting upon
thinness--Guthman offers a complex analysis of our entire economic
system.