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Chapters in this book
- Frontmatter i
- Contents v
- List of Illustrations, Figures, and Tables vii
- Acknowledgments ix
- Introduction 1
-
SECTION I Epistemologies and Philosophies
- 1 The Enfleshment of Difference: Medicalizing and Gendering the Fat Body in the Nineteenth Century 17
- 2 To Measure Skulls, to Measure Waists: The Nineteenth-Century Origins of Modern Health Standards 41
-
SECTION II Weights and Measures
- 3 “All young things are fat if they are in health”:1 The Shift from Qualitative to Quantitative Assessments of Infant Weight in the Nineteenth-Century United States 61
- 4 Physical Culture and the Denial of Fat in fin de siècle America 86
- 5 Prison Bodies: The Height and Weight of Men in Canadian Prisons, 1874–1935 107
-
SECTION III Cultural Representations and Constructions
- 6 Visual and Material Cultures of the Fat Body, 1780–1840: Representation, Commodification, and Display 137
- 7 The Fat Body and Colonial Symbolism: Imperialism, Appetite, and Hunger in Joseph Conrad’s Heart of Darkness 157
- 8 Visualizing the Body: The Mbopo Ritual and the Politics of Fatness in Southern Nigeria in the Late Nineteenth and Early Twentieth Centuries 172
-
SECTION IV Imperialism, Colonialism, and the Body Politic
- 9 Colonial Engorgement in the Pictorial Arts: “Fat” Uncle Sam in the Imperialist Debates, 1898–1902 197
- 10 Gaining in Flesh: Canadian Soldiers in the War in South Africa 224
- Conclusion 241
- Bibliography 245
- List of Contributors 267
- Index 271
Chapters in this book
- Frontmatter i
- Contents v
- List of Illustrations, Figures, and Tables vii
- Acknowledgments ix
- Introduction 1
-
SECTION I Epistemologies and Philosophies
- 1 The Enfleshment of Difference: Medicalizing and Gendering the Fat Body in the Nineteenth Century 17
- 2 To Measure Skulls, to Measure Waists: The Nineteenth-Century Origins of Modern Health Standards 41
-
SECTION II Weights and Measures
- 3 “All young things are fat if they are in health”:1 The Shift from Qualitative to Quantitative Assessments of Infant Weight in the Nineteenth-Century United States 61
- 4 Physical Culture and the Denial of Fat in fin de siècle America 86
- 5 Prison Bodies: The Height and Weight of Men in Canadian Prisons, 1874–1935 107
-
SECTION III Cultural Representations and Constructions
- 6 Visual and Material Cultures of the Fat Body, 1780–1840: Representation, Commodification, and Display 137
- 7 The Fat Body and Colonial Symbolism: Imperialism, Appetite, and Hunger in Joseph Conrad’s Heart of Darkness 157
- 8 Visualizing the Body: The Mbopo Ritual and the Politics of Fatness in Southern Nigeria in the Late Nineteenth and Early Twentieth Centuries 172
-
SECTION IV Imperialism, Colonialism, and the Body Politic
- 9 Colonial Engorgement in the Pictorial Arts: “Fat” Uncle Sam in the Imperialist Debates, 1898–1902 197
- 10 Gaining in Flesh: Canadian Soldiers in the War in South Africa 224
- Conclusion 241
- Bibliography 245
- List of Contributors 267
- Index 271