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Rich, Emma; Evans, John – Gender and Education, 2009
This paper draws on data collected from young white middle class women experiencing eating disorders to highlight what we refer to as the paradox of performativity in schools. In interviews with these young women on their schooling experiences, their narratives convey both a critique of the social conditions of their schooling and their subjugated…
Descriptors: Middle Class, Females, Whites, Eating Disorders
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Evans, John; Rich, Emma; Allwood, Rachel; Davies, Brian – British Educational Research Journal, 2008
Schools within a "knowledge economy" nurture and endorse particular "corporeal orientations", that is to say, ascribe value, meaning and potential to "the body" (particular bodies) in time, place and space. Such processes reflect wider (national and global) socio-economic trends. In contemporary culture, these processes increasingly celebrate…
Descriptors: Females, Self Concept, Body Composition, Value Judgment
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Evans, John; Rich, Emma; Holroyd, Rachel – British Journal of Sociology of Education, 2004
This paper focuses upon relationships barely explored in the sociology of education either in the UK or elsewhere that lie between the practices and processes of formal education and the aetiology (the 'causations') and development of eating disorders, specifically, anorexia nervosa (AN) in young women and girls. In so doing, it also touches on…
Descriptors: Sociocultural Patterns, Middle Class, Females, Cultural Background
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Rich, Emma; Evans, John – Discourse: Studies in the Cultural Politics of Education, 2005
Over the last two decades we have witnessed an emerging set of conditions in schools which render them contexts replete with social messages about the body, health, and self. Research has suggested that both the formal and informal contexts of education are heavily imbued with a "culture of healthism" which places moral obligation and…
Descriptors: Females, Eating Disorders, Biographies, Self Concept