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Fat Christians and Fit Elites: Negotiating Class and Status in Evangelical Christian Weight-Loss Culture
- American Quarterly
- Johns Hopkins University Press
- Volume 64, Number 1, March 2012
- pp. 61-84
- 10.1353/aq.2012.0011
- Article
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As American culture has become increasingly concerned about fatness, the fat body and weight loss have become salient symbols for other social tensions. This article uses the case of evangelical Christian weight-loss culture to argue that class is one of those tensions. Drawing on ethnographic work in a Christian weight-loss program as well as on recent theories of class, I argue that certain recurring concerns in Christians’ weight-loss discourse, notably concerns about fat Christian leaders and appearing healthy, reflect tensions about class-based aspirations and class-based denigrations evangelicals face in negotiating their position in American society.