Fat Disorders
Contrasting Approaches Towards Dealing With Corpulence: A Comparison Between Eating and Weight Disorders and Obesity Surgery: Stories of Altered Lives
Upon first examination, there would appear to be several areas of similarity between Carlos Grilo's Eating and Weight Disorders and Obesity Surgery: Stories of Altered Lives, which is co-authored by Marta Meana and Lindsey Ricciardi. Both literary works detail the finer points of cautionary measures regarding complications of eating, as well as the many hazards which may accompany this seemingly innocuous, vital act. However, thorough analysis of each book reveals a departure in the methodology and purposes presented in the manuscripts. Eating and Weight Disorders takes a decidedly more academic approach in presenting a comprehensive overview of the various types of disorders associated with eating including specific symptoms, potential treatments, and the overall prevalence in which such conditions can occur. Obesity Surgery: Stories of Altered Lives, on the other hand, is concerned with the several nuances influencing and affecting the causes and procedures of surgery to correct obesity, and is more sociological in focus in determining the psychological processes involved with this medical action.
The point of commonality between the books, however, is in their treatment of the all-too frequent occurrence of obesity and its influence on the perception of self-image and overall health in contemporary Western society. While Meana and Ricciardi's manuscript deals solely with this particular condition, obesity is one of the many disorders detailed in Grilo's work, which is primarily focused on eating disorders of all varieties. Interestingly enough, Grilo contrasts the polemics of obesity with those of typical eating disorders, and even stratifies the former from the latter as being primarily a physical medical condition, while denoting that the root causes of eating disorders are primarily psychological in nature (Grilo, 2006, p.14). The contrast between obesity and eating disorders continues with the author's assertion that obesity is an extremely common occurrence in Western society, while eating disorders are significantly rarer. Furthermore, Grilo cites obesity as one of the leading causes of morbidity and mortality, and alludes to the fact that its prevalence is steadily increasing (Grilo, 2006, p.4).
The premise of Meana and Ricciardi's book certainly seems to agree with many of Grilo's assertions regarding obesity, for the simple fact that the pair of authors has devoted the vast majority of the pages of their work to factors involved in what is commonly perceived as a correction to such an issue: a surgical procedure which inherently reduces the ability of the human body to become corpulent. Yet the authors' approach in deconstructing the nature of obesity greatly varies from Grilo's removed, academic analysis of qualitative statistics and citations of previous sources, and is focused on the social, psychological, and decidedly more human aspect of such a condition which would drive people to consider and actually undergo gastric intestinal surgery. The following quotation, in which the authors attend a prospective-patient seminar for the surgical procedure, elucidates the fact that this approach is one of the principle themes in Obesity Surgery: Stories of Altered Lives. "Sitting among the audiences of severely obese individuals and a smattering of significant others, we found ourselves humbled by the challenges these individuals had faced in the past and were about to confront in their near future…We didn't discuss whether this surgery was really necessary or whether these folks would be better served by a good lifestyle-modification program. We wondered what their lives were like and the ways in which these lives would be changed by weight loss (Meana and Ricciardi, 2008, p. 1)."
The preceding passage underscores a degree of compassion and highlights the authors' concerns for the specific, individual social and psychological ramifications of people's attempts to cope with the presence of obesity in a way which Grilo's work does not address. What makes this comparison all the more noteworthy is that Eating and Food Disorders addresses similar issues that Surgical Procedures does, albeit it from a distanced, academic standpoint that rarely (if ever) considers the human nature of the subjects or statistical data (which represent subjects) of those who experience obesity. The following quotation, in which the author presents information about individuals essaying to lose weight, indicates Grilo's disaffected academician approach which is typical of his work on the whole. "The prevalence of attempting to lose weight in the U.S. has been studied in several...
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