Eating as a Gendered Act: Christianity, Feminism, and Reclaiming the Body
Online Access
https://philpapers.org/rec/VANEAA-10Abstract
In current society, eating is most definitely a gendered act: that is, what we eat and how we eat it factors in both the construction and the performance of gender. Furthermore, eating is a gendered act with consequences that go far beyond whether one orders a steak or a salad for dinner. In the first half of this paper, I identify the dominant myths surrounding both female and male eating, and I show that those myths contribute in important ways to cultural constructions of male and female appetites more generally speaking. In the second half, I argue that the Christian church should share feminism’s perception of these current cultural myths as fundamentally disordered, and I claim that the Christian traditions of fasting and feasting present us with a concrete means to counter those damaging conceptions and reclaim a healthy attitude toward our hunger.Date
2008Type
info:eu-repo/semantics/articleIdentifier
oai:philpapers.org/rec/VANEAA-10https://philpapers.org/rec/VANEAA-10