Over the last two decades, fatness has become the focus of ubiquitous negative rhetoric, in the USA and beyond, presented under the cover of the medicalized ''war against the obesity epidemic''. In
Fat on Film, Barbara Plotz provides a critical analysis of the cinematic representation of fatness during this timeframe, specifically in contemporary Hollywood cinema, with an emphasis on the intersection of gender, race and fatness. The analysis is based on around 50 films released since 2000 and includes examples such as
Transformers (2007),
Precious (2009),
Kung Fu Panda (2008),
Paul Blart (2009)
and
Pitch Perfect (2012).Plotz maps the common cinematic tropes of fatness and also shows how commonplace notions of fatness that are part of the current ''obesity epidemic'' discourse are reflected in these tropes. In this original study, Plotz brings critical attention to the politics of fat representation, a topic that has so far received little attention within film and cinema studies.
About the AuthorBarbara Plotz is Associate Lecturer at London College of Communication and she also teaches in the Department of Film Studies at King's College London, UK. She is a film scholar working at the intersection of film and cultural studies, with a focus on representation, gender, the body, and genre - specifically horror cinema.
Book InformationISBN 9781350191662
Author Barbara PlotzFormat Paperback
Page Count 296
Imprint Bloomsbury AcademicPublisher Bloomsbury Publishing PLC
Series Library of Gender and Popular CultureWeight(grams) 349g