Responding to representations of fatphobia in prose and comics

Nicole Ann Amato
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Abstract

Purpose

The purpose of this paper is to explore teacher candidates’ response to young adult literature (prose and comics) featuring fat identified protagonists. The paper considers the textual and embodied resources readers use and reject when imagining and interpreting a character’s body. This paper explores how readers’ meaning making was influenced when reading prose versus comics. This paper adds to a corpus of scholarship about the relationships between young adult literature, comics, bodies and reader response theory.

Design/methodology/approach

At the time of the study, participants were enrolled in a teacher education program at a Midwestern University, meeting monthly for a voluntary book club dedicated to reading and discussing young adult literature. To examine readers’ responses to comics and prose featuring fat-identified protagonists, the author used descriptive qualitative methodologies to conduct a thematic analysis of meeting transcripts, written participant reflections and researcher memos. Analysis was grounded in theories of reader response, critical fat studies and multimodality.

Findings

Analyses indicated many readers reject textual clues indicating a character’s body size and weight were different from their own. Readers read their bodies into the stories, regarding them as self-help narratives instead of radical counternarratives. Some readers were not able to read against their assumptions of thinness (and whiteness) until prompted by the researcher and other participants.

Originality/value

Although many reader response scholars have demonstrated readers’ tendencies toward personal identification in the face of racial and class differences, there is less research regarding classroom practices around the entanglement of physical bodies, body image and texts. Analyzing reader’s responses to the constructions of fat bodies in prose versus comics may help English Language Arts (ELA) educators and students identify and deconstruct ideologies of thin-thinking and fatphobia. This study, which demonstrates thin readers’ tendencies to overidentify with protagonists, suggests ELA classrooms might encourage readers to engage in critical literacies that support them in reading both with and against their identities.

应对散文和漫画中的 "恐胖症 "表述
本文旨在探讨教师候选人对以胖为主角的青少年文学作品(散文和漫画)的反应。本文探讨了读者在想象和解释人物身体时使用和拒绝的文本和体现资源。本文探讨了读者在阅读散文和漫画时,其意义建构是如何受到影响的。本文为有关青少年文学、漫画、身体和读者反应理论之间关系的学术文献库增添了新的内容。设计/方法/途径在研究期间,参与者就读于一所中西部大学的教师教育项目,每月参加一个自愿的读书俱乐部,专门阅读和讨论青少年文学。为了研究读者对以胖为主角的漫画和散文的反应,作者采用了描述性定性方法,对会议记录、参与者的书面反思和研究者备忘录进行了主题分析。分析以读者反应、批判性脂肪研究和多模态理论为基础。分析表明,许多读者拒绝接受表明人物的体型和体重与自己不同的文字线索。读者在故事中读出了自己的身体,将其视为自助叙事,而不是激进的反叙事。原创性/价值尽管许多读者反应学者已经证明了读者在面对种族和阶级差异时的个人认同倾向,但关于围绕身体、身体形象和文本之间的纠葛的课堂实践的研究却较少。分析读者对散文和漫画中肥胖身体建构的反应,有助于英语语言艺术(ELA)教育工作者和学生识别并解构瘦削思维和肥胖恐惧症的意识形态。本研究表明,瘦读者倾向于过度认同主人公,因此建议英语语言艺术(ELA)课堂可以鼓励读者参与批判性的文学创作,支持他们在阅读时既考虑到自己的身份,也反对自己的身份。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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