Dr. Richard A. O'Connor
Department of Anthropology
University of the South
Wednesday, November 29, 2006
5:45-6:45 pm
State Farm Lecture Hall (BAS S102)
Our era knows two anorexias. One, the private hell that anorexics
suffer,
is lived rather than spoken. The other, a public debate over gender,
genetic and media causes, is spoken rather than lived... Although well intentioned, the public's anorexia silences the anorexic
by ignoring her point of view-how she lives within her life-world. When it
comes to explaining the disease, activists as well as experts either look
through her to some underlying biological or psychological cause or
beyond
her to an overarching social or cultural determinant. Yet our research
shows anorexia is neither beneath nor beyond the anorexic's life-world but
within her point of view. Anorexics are moral actors, not media
puppets.
They embody our era's ascetic values, what Max Weber called "the ghost of
dead religious beliefs." While their restricted eating aims at virtue-to
be good, not just look good-the activity takes on a bodily life of its
own,
becoming a self-destructive vice. Can research capture a lived but silent viewpoint? Indeed, can
outsiders get inside self-starvation's madness? That challenge goes to the
heart of anthropology. To meet it, we chose to focus on the little and
local as well as the large and global. For the little, we did in-depth
interviews with 20 recovered anorexics-13 in Tennessee and seven in
Toronto-to get their stories in their own words as well as to place each
within her own life-world. For the large, to place those life-worlds
within today's ecology, we studied the historical origins and ongoing
sources of contemporary attitudes toward food, eating and the body. Taken
together, the little and large place today's anorexic within a century-old
reaction against modern laxity and anomie. Withdrawing into rituals of
restricted eating, she creates an island of purity and control in
society's corrupt and chaotic sea. Although this turns pathological, this
same island-making fuels today's competitive sports, a popular fascination
that arose at the same time as modern anorexia. Dr. O'Connor is Biehl Professor of Anthropology and Director of the
Center for
Teaching at the University of the South. His research
interests focus on Southeast Asia, American Culture, and Anorexia. For more information, contact Dr. William Leggett, (615) 904-8589,
wleggett@mtsu.edu. Sponsored by the Department of Sociology and Anthropology and Middle
Tennessee Anthropology Society