Oprah and Ozempic: a commentary on Oprah Winfrey's "shame, blame and the weight loss revolution".

Autor: Williams, Apryl, Monier, Mel
Předmět:
Zdroj: Critical Studies in Media Communication; Aug2024, Vol. 41 Issue 3, p263-268, 6p
Abstrakt: In this essay, we examine Oprah Winfrey's body as a site of cultural negotiation of body positivity, fat acceptance and the thin ideal. We analyze the intersection of race, body size, and media representation, focusing on how Oprah, as a black woman celebrity, navigates societal pressures related to body image. The rise of accessible weight loss medications ushers in a resurgence of the thin ideal, complicating the discourse around weight loss and body neutrality. Using fat studies and black feminist theories, we examine how Oprah's celebrity status is entangled with the acceptability of fat women, black women, and fat black women. By Analyzing Oprah's special "Shame, Blame and the Weight Loss Revolution," we demonstrate that Oprah's language embraces body positivity yet, the framing of the show symbolically annihilates those who are content with their large bodies. The special's focus on weight loss, coupled with the absence of positive portrayals of fat bodies, underscores a broader pattern of symbolic annihilation. Hence, we explore the converging pressures of Oprah's celebrity, desire for thinness, and attempt to represent multiple viewpoints about the weight loss "revolution." [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
Databáze: Complementary Index