Content area

Abstract

Eating disorders have been associated with developing nations undergoing rapid social transition, including participation in a global market economy and heavy media exposure. San Andrés, Belize, a community with many risk factors associated with the cross-cultural development of eating disorders, has shown remarkable resistance to previously documented patterns, despite a local focus on female beauty. Drawing on longitudinal person-centered ethnography with adolescent girls, this article examines why this community appears exceptional in light of the literature. First, community beauty and body image ideals and practices are explicated. Then, a protective ethnopsychology is proposed as a key mediating factor of the rapid socio-cultural change among young women. Finally, possible nascent cases of eating disordered behavior are discussed in light of their unique phenomenology: that is, having to do more with economic opportunity in the tourism industry and less with personal distress or desire for thinness. Close, meaning-centered examination of eating and body image practices may aid understanding and prevention of eating disorders among adolescents undergoing rapid social change in situations of globalization and immigration.

Details

Title
A "Coca-Cola" Shape: Cultural Change, Body Image, and Eating Disorders in San Andrés, Belize
Author
Anderson-Fye, Eileen P
Pages
561-95
Publication year
2004
Publication date
Dec 2004
Publisher
Springer Nature B.V.
ISSN
0165005X
e-ISSN
1573076X
Source type
Scholarly Journal
Language of publication
English
ProQuest document ID
229982612
Copyright
Springer Science + Business Media, Inc. 2004