Professor Anand Presents at ISA Annual Convention, Addresses the Issues Around the Westernization of the Body Image in India |
Monday, 23 December 2013 |
In her abstract, Professor Anand writes: "This paper seeks to problematize the impact of the global diffusion of the Western image of 鈥榯hin鈥 body types and body images amongst women in India. In India, where thinness used to be a sign of malnutrition, poverty and disease, while well-rounded and curvy women portrayed health, wealth and prosperity, a transformation has taken place 鈥 in thought, perception and practice 鈥 that has had a series of positive and negative impacts on women鈥檚 rights and roles in patriarchal India. Thinness has begun to indicate beauty, good health, self-discipline and sexual attractiveness and this culture has spread over time through Asia, Africa and Latin America. Who are the agents and what are the causal mechanisms carrying out (or blocking) this diffusion? What are the outcomes of this diffusion? Is it desirable or not? Why? In a culture where gender disparities and sex discrimination continue at all levels of society, embracing this vision has further pushed the Indian women being talked about to being 鈥渙bjects鈥 rather than 鈥樷漵ubjects鈥 of their own bodies. Colonized by their sex and gender at multiple levels, women鈥檚 body images are indicators of a deeper political, anthropological and social issue than just transforming one鈥檚 body type." On a related topic, Ruchi Anand was interviewed for a feature-length documentary entitled "The Illusionists" to be released in 2014. This documentary focuses on the commodification of the body and the marketing of unattainable beauty around the world. Professor Anand's interview covers the way that these issues play out in post-globalization India. |
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