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El. knyga: One Size Does Not Fit All: Undressing the Performance of Bodies in Popular Culture

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This edited collection explores the malleability and influence of body image, focusing particularly on how media representation and popular cultures focus on the body exacerbates the crucial social influence these representations can have on audiences perceptions of themselves and others. Contributors investigate the cultural context and lived experiences of individuals relationships with their bodies, going beyond examination of the thin, ideal body type to explore the emerging representations and portrayals of a diverse set of body types across the media spectrum, paving the way for future research on this topic. Scholars of media studies, popular culture, and health communication will find this book particularly useful.

Recenzijos

"Hopper and LeBlanc have assembled an exciting and timely collection about popular discourses about, and media representations of, bodies, identities, and weight. Featuring chapters that engage contemporary size-related social issues, ad campaigns, influencers, and/or celebrities, contributors offer critical arguments and observations about embodiment and empowerment, shame and stigma, health and happiness, desire and desirability." -- Tony Adams, Bradley University Employing themes from decades of research on body image disturbance, as well as themes from the body positivity literature and movement, the "One Size Does Not Fit All" volume provides a captivating examination of representations of the body in influential popular culture texts. The chapters traverse paradigms, methodologies, and theories, and together, provide compelling case studies of bodies in diverse texts -- from the emodiment of Lizzo to ever-present Instagram influencers to the anti-fat biases in Friends. This volume is an outstanding resource for media and body image scholars. -- Jennifer Stevens Aubrey, University of Arizona "One Size Does Not Fit All fits solidly in the growing trend of communication scholarship that prioritizes inclusive, multi-methodological approaches to popular culture. From Lizzo and social media to television and advertising, this edited volume covers a range of production, representation, and interpretation of bodies and would be a worthy assigned text for courses in pop culture, gender, and the like." -- Danielle Stern, Christopher Newport University

Acknowledgments ix
Preface xi
Sarah S. LeBlanc
1 Introduction
1(6)
Sarah S. LeBlanc
K. Megan Hopper
Sylvia Rust
PART I LIZZO
7(38)
2 Auntie Sam Rocks the Vote! The Embodied Politics of Lizzo in the 2020 U.S. Election
9(16)
Ruth J. Beerman
3 Feelin' Good as Hell?: The Influence of Cardi B. and Lizzo's Music Videos on College-Aged Women's Perceptions of Beauty, Sexism, and Sexualization
25(20)
Amy Crumbaugh
Tamanna Tasmin
K. Megan Hopper
PART II SOCIAL MEDIA
45(96)
4 "This is the Kind of Influencer We Want to See!": A Study of Body Representation among Instagram Influencers
47(20)
Nora Suren
5 Accidental Culture Jamming: Celeste Barber and the Juxtaposition between the Real and Ideal Body
67(20)
Erin Cook
Trischa Goodnow
6 Keeping Up with the Yummy Mummies?: Examining Kim Kardashian's Mediated Yummy Mummy Images on the Reality Television Program Keeping Up with The Kardashians versus Instagram Posts
87(22)
Suri M. Pourmodheji
7 (Re)Presentations: Personal Narratives and the Posthuman Body in the #MeToo Movement
109(14)
Amanda Hill
8 "He's dragged me here so I can understand": Race, Gender, and the Performance of Painted Bodies in MTV's Drag My Dad
123(18)
Wanjiru Mbure
Wendy Chapman Peek
PART III TELEVISION
141(86)
9 "There's a lot of inches to love": Expectancy Violations, Fat Identity, Weight Stigma, and Relational Turmoil in TLC's Hot and Heavy
143(30)
Mary Beth Asbury
Jessica M. W. Kratzer
10 "Body-ody-ody-ody-ody-ody-ody-ody": Interrogating Black Bodies in Cable Television
173(20)
Siobhan E. Smith-Jones
Johnny Jones
11 The One with All the Fat-Shaming: An Examination of Anti-Fat Bias on Friends
193(16)
Adrienne Darrah
12 Where Power Resides: An Analysis of Female Bodies in Game of Thrones
209(18)
Juliana Russell
Sarah S. LeBlanc
PART IV ADVERTISING
227(78)
13 "Anti-Racist X-rays?": Color-Blind Racism and the "Universal" Body
229(20)
Beck Wise
14 #Realbodies: Exploring the Impact of Women Empowerment Advertisements
249(24)
Ashton Gerding Speno
Jennifer Lewallen Woolf
15 Eat French Fries and Be Healthy: The Fit Body as a Means of Promoting Fast Food
273(14)
Debbie Danowski
16 Ideal-Body Media and Gay Men's Self-Discrepancy
287(18)
Irena Acic
Lindsay Roberts
Laramie D. Taylor
Index 305(2)
About the Contributors 307
K. Megan Hopper is associate professor in the School of Communication at Illinois State University.

Sarah S. LeBlanc is assistant professor in interpersonal communication.