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Voices of anorexia: A study of voice, communication, and the body

Mary Ellen Olson, University of Massachusetts Amherst

Abstract

The purpose of the study is to hear and record what women, who have recovered from anorexia, have to say about their experiences of self-starvation. The study bears witness to these lives and examines the interpretations that have guided the women's intentions, actions, and purposes. There are in-depth case studies of four women—Nell, Rose, Grace, and Marie. Each narrative gives an account of the particular phenomenological meanings embodied by the action of self-starvation and analyzes how each woman used this practice as a form of communication. The principle of collaboration has shaped the process of interviewing and the way the narratives have been constructed to give voice and authorship to the participants. The deconstruction of food and body as symbols gives access to the psychological and social experience of the participants. Violence and/or alcoholism played a role in the family backgrounds of all four women.

Subject Area

Communication|Womens studies|Psychotherapy

Recommended Citation

Olson, Mary Ellen, "Voices of anorexia: A study of voice, communication, and the body" (1999). Doctoral Dissertations Available from Proquest. AAI9932334.
https://scholarworks.umass.edu/dissertations/AAI9932334

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