Eating disorders vs Culture and weight consciousness

Both "Culture and weight consciousness" by Mervat Nasser and "Eating disorders" by Laura J. Goodman are popular choices for readers interested in Cross-cultural studies and Eating disorders. This comparison helps you decide which to read first — or whether both belong on your list.

Shared Themes

Eating disordersFeeding and Eating DisordersPsychologyTroubles du comportement alimentaireSELF-HELP
Cover of Eating disorders

Eating disorders

Laura J. Goodman

2001

The widely updated second edition of Eating Disorders: Journey to Recovery Workbook helps those struggling with eating disorders in their recovery, guiding the reader through a greater consideration of body image, compulsive exercising, and personal and societal relationships based on Prochaska’s Stages of Change Theory. The workbook explores complicated issues having a direct effect on the eating disorder, including trauma, depression, gender identity, abuse, and the media. Updated to include the acknowledgement of binge-eating disorder, selective eating, and avoidant restrictive food intake disorder (ARFID), this second edition encourages self-paced learning and practice adjunct to one-on-one and group therapy from two seasoned clinicians in the treatment of eating disorders.

Published 2001
Books like Eating disorders
Cover of Culture and weight consciousness

Culture and weight consciousness

Mervat Nasser

1997

Anorexia nervosa and bulimia are among the few psychiatric syndromes with a plausible socio-cultural model of causation. Issues of culture and slimness are usually considered in terms of the experience of the western world, but there is a growing body of research suggesting that concern with slimness is becoming more prevalent in non-western cultures. In Culture and Weight Consciousness, Mervat Nasser brings together this research and looks at the recent emergence of eating disorders in cultures that were previously free of such problems. She relates the feminist theories that have been put forward to explain the phenomenon of eating disorders in the west to the condition of modern women in many non-western cultures and concludes that their position is not at all that different from that of their western counterparts. This leads her to address the current limitations of the concept of culture and draw out the implications for future research.

Published 1997
Books like Culture and weight consciousness

Frequently Asked Questions

Which is easier to read: Culture and weight consciousness or Eating disorders?
Reading difficulty depends on your familiarity with the genre. Check each book's page count and subject matter above, and start with whichever aligns better with books you've enjoyed before.
Can I read Culture and weight consciousness and Eating disorders in any order?
Yes — these are standalone works. You don't need to read one before the other unless they're part of the same series.
Which book is better for beginners?
If you're new to this genre, look at the shorter book with broader appeal and start there. You can always come back for the other.

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