If you have ever looked at your body in the mirror and said yuck, this is a book for you.
Hirschmann argues that the loathing of fat is a by-product of our anti-female, misogynist culture. She points out that until women got the vote our naturally rounded and padded figures were accepted as the norm. Women turned their collective rage about being second-class citizens inward and began to loathe their feminine bodies. Thus, the flat-chested, boy-like figures that came into vogue in the 1920's.
She also argues that one of the major reasons that we have a major problem with obesity in this country is because of fad diets. While on these diets, people begin to assign values to foods and also to themselves, i.e. "If I eat cupcakes today, a "bad" food, then I am a "bad" person." When values are assigned to food, people tend to binge on the "forbidden" food, causing overeating and consequently obesity.
A good example of how all this plays out in our culture is that you often hear women say, "my husband can eat anything he wants, he is so lucky." Why can your husband eat anything but you cannot? Because his body is different from yours? Because he is a slender male and you are a voluptuous female? Why shouldn't we eat the foods we enjoy as well? This is different than eating excessively, but when my husband eats ice cream every night, I don't think he's a glutton or a un-disciplined pig, but how quickly do I attack myself using those very words for doing the same thing?
When you think about it, we are very cruel to ourselves and other women when we treat ourselves this way. Ladies, let's purge anti-fat, anti-female talk from our lives, and live in a more dignified way, especially for the sake of our daughters--and down with diets!