| (Figure 1 Me in front of the room) |
For my second extra credit event, I attended What’s Wrong with Fat? Author-Meets-Critics
on December 6th, which was held Royce 314. The purpose of this event
was for author Abigail Saguy and critics, Bianca Wilson, Tamar Harwich and Ed
Walker to discuss Saguy’s book, What’s
Wrong with Fat?. Since this event
did not go into great detail about the books plot, I did some research online. What’s Wrong with Fat? looks at how obesity has become framed as
a public health crisis which has been blown out of proportion. “Saguy says that
when we talk about an obesity epidemic we assume moving non-obese to obese is
like moving from health to illness”, according to Detrick.
| (Figure 2 Me at the Conference Room) |
Although the relation of this event to art is clear, I was a
little lost on its connection to technology at first. However, I eventually
realized that it is not the event that relates to technology, but the book
itself. A large portion of this book is devoted to a
study of the media and its thirst for sensational headlines about an impending
epidemic, and although the headlines may be dramatic they offer little
knowledge about healthy living.
| (Figure 3 Conference Room) |
Throughout the evening, three critics discussed Saguy’s book,
and offered many examples from the book where Saguy successfully addressed the
issue about the difficulty of talking about fatness, the way being fat is
framed as a problem, and the potential for removing the stigma. However, after
listening to the critics for a while I realized that they were not necessarily “critics”,
but people describing the book in a different perspective. Although some people
may find it dull listening to people talk about a book, I was surprised at my
level of interest throughout the event. Since
each critic offered a unique insight on the book, I was constantly kept drawn
in.
Works Cited
Detrick, Paul. "UCLA Professor Abigail Saguy on What's Wrong with Fat?." reason.com. Reason Foundation, 18 Mar 2013. Web. 13 Dec 2013. <http://reason.com/reasontv/2013/03/18/ucla-professor-abigail-saguy-on-whats-wr>.
Figure 1. Sanders, Leigh. Me in front of the room. 2013. Photograph. n.p. Web. 13 Dec 2013.
Figure 2. Sanders, Leigh. Me at the Conference Room. 2013. Photograph. n.p. Web. 13 Dec 2013.
Figure 3. Sanders, Leigh. Conference Room. 2013. Photograph. n.p. Web. 13 Dec 2013.










