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    <dc:date>2026-04-23T09:27:46Z</dc:date>
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  <item rdf:about="https://www.um.edu.mt/library/oar/handle/123456789/6862">
    <title>An imperfect body reflects an imperfect person : ethnographic study of eating disorders in Malta and Italy</title>
    <link>https://www.um.edu.mt/library/oar/handle/123456789/6862</link>
    <description>Title: An imperfect body reflects an imperfect person : ethnographic study of eating disorders in Malta and Italy
Abstract: Since the 1980s the phenomenon of eating disorders (anorexia nervosa, bulimia&#xD;
nervosa and binge eating disorder) has become a matter of increased public attention&#xD;
in Western societies, with a consequent proliferation of scientific studies&#xD;
accompanying widespread social concern.&#xD;
Considering (i) The low success rates of psychological and medical treatments (ii) The&#xD;
ambiguity as regards the aetiology of the phenomenon as well as (iii) The prevalence&#xD;
of eating disorders among young women in Western societies, the biomedical&#xD;
approach has proven to be fairly limited in its understanding and treatment of eating&#xD;
disorders. Eating disorders are produced as a medical category through a medical&#xD;
discourse that pathologises specific behaviours towards food and the body. As a&#xD;
consequence, the biomedical approach does not reflect the perception of people with&#xD;
eating disorders of their “habits”.&#xD;
This fact highlights the need to adopt a “multidisciplinary approach” to the&#xD;
phenomenon, in particular focusing on the socio-cultural factors involved in the&#xD;
definition, perception and onset of eating disorders. The importance of socio-cultural factors becomes apparent when considering the&#xD;
Italian and Maltese cases. Although preliminary studies have found a similarity in the&#xD;
rates of people diagnosed with eating disorders in Malta and Italy, the “patients’”&#xD;
perception of the “disease” varies in the two contexts; similarly, public perception and&#xD;
treatments are different in the two cases considered.&#xD;
The thesis, based on ethnographic research in Malta and Italy, and supported by online&#xD;
fieldwork, aims to shed light on the personal experiences of people with eating disorders in the two contexts, considering in particular the cultural link between mind,&#xD;
body and culture in eating disorders. In contrast with the biomedical perception of the&#xD;
phenomenon and in opposition with the prevalent feminist theories on the subject, I&#xD;
will consider eating disorders as self-transformative processes in which people with&#xD;
eating disorders actively engage themselves in a project of moral self-transformation&#xD;
that is culturally defined. Their moral transformations reflect, in fact, the social&#xD;
expectations towards women.
Description: PH.D.</description>
    <dc:date>2015-01-01T00:00:00Z</dc:date>
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