Deadline Extended: Call for Contributors

Amy Shaw (she/her) Announcement
Location
Alberta, Canada
Subject Fields
Canadian History / Studies, Social History / Studies, Women's & Gender History / Studies, Childhood and Education, Health and Health Care

CALL FOR PAPERS

Fat and the Body in the Long 19th Century

In the 21st century the “obesity epidemic” has come to be seen as a public health crisis in North America. But fat did not always have such negative connotations. In the 19th and early 20th centuries there was a lively and complex debate about the meaning of fat and its signalling of both health and beauty. On the one hand, for example, the fashionability of the corset celebrated the wasp-waisted feminine beauty, while on the other a robust weight indicated a healthy body.

This collection intends to animate discussion and analysis of fatness during the 19th century, when the body was a key focus of discourse, by asking questions such as: Who should be fat? Who should be thin? Who sets these standards? What did these corporeal expectations say about larger social systems? How did these expectations shift over time?

We invite submissions from scholars whose work takes a historical approach to addressing aspects of the body and fatness or thinness. We particularly invite work that reflects the racial, ethnic, linguistic, religious, class, and/or regional differences found in Canada and the United States during the nineteenth and early twentieth centuries, and encourage submissions that break new ground, ask new questions, and/or deal with groups or issues underrepresented in the existing historiography.

Possible topics include:

  • analysis of how interpretations of fat were shaped by class
  • fatness and ethnicity
  • region
  • gender – idealized male and female bodies
  • age – differing interpretations of fatness according to life stage
  • representations in popular culture
  • popular health movements
  • body types going in and out of fashion
  • clothing – used to minimize or accentuate various body parts
  • thinness

Interested scholars should send a short (250-500 words) abstract of their proposed paper and a one page CV to either of the editors by June 1, 2019.

Authors of accepted proposals will be notified by July 15, 2019.

Authors of accepted proposals will be asked to submit a completed essay of 5,000-7,000 words aimed at a 1st or 2nd year university level, formatted in Chicago style, no later than December 15, 2019.

Questions, enquiries, and submissions may be sent to either lynn.kennedy@uleth.ca or amy.shaw@uleth.c

Contact Information

Dr. Amy Shaw, University of Lethbridge

Dr. Lynn Kennedy, University of Lethbridge

Contact Email
amy.shaw@uleth.ca; lynn.kennedy@uleth.ca