Sensing and making sense of the anorexic body

ObjectiveThis study aims at describing the physical experience felt during anorexia nervosa and understanding the sense anorexic sufferers attribute to behaviours of dietary restriction and purgation present in this kind of eating disorder. MethodsEthnography and the biographic method were used to f...

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Detalhes bibliográficos
Autor: Formighieri GIORDANI, Rubia Carla
Tipo de documento: artigo
Estado:Versão publicada
Data de publicação:2023
País:Brasil
Recursos:Pontifícia Universidade Católica de Campinas (PUC-CAMPINAS)
Repositório:Revista de Nutrição
Idioma:português
OAI Identifier:oai:ojs.periodicos.puc-campinas.edu.br:article/9533
Acesso em linha:https://periodicos.puc-campinas.edu.br/nutricao/article/view/9533
Access Level:Acceso aberto
Palavra-chave:Body
Anorexia nervosa
Eating disorders
Corpo
Transtornos alimentares
Descrição
Resumo:ObjectiveThis study aims at describing the physical experience felt during anorexia nervosa and understanding the sense anorexic sufferers attribute to behaviours of dietary restriction and purgation present in this kind of eating disorder. MethodsEthnography and the biographic method were used to follow eight anorexia sufferers to obtain a detailed description of the content of their experience with the illness. Interviews, letters and diaries were used to reconstruct the narrative of their life stories. The field work was done in Curitiba (PR) Brazil, from January to September of 2003. ResultsThe phenomenological approach used in the study privileges the experience as told by the patient who uses the reconstruction of his or her life story to bring up what he or she experienced. In this discussion, the body assumes a central role because it is not only the foundation and condition for the individual to take part in the social world, but also the foundation for the socially built experience of anorexia nervosa. The sense attributed by the individual to his or her experience is the result of the combination of his or her life story and the knowledge gained by living, together with that which is experimented through the body in an intersubjectiveworld. The distorted body image is directly related to one’s life experiences and the behaviours are a manifestation of the desire of changing his or her own reality. ConclusionThis study showed that the body is an important dimension to be recognized in order to understand the process of falling ill. It also raised specific questions that need to be studied regarding the genesis of anorexia nervosa in modern Western societies. It revealed that the bodily experience in anorexia nervosa communicates a social dimension of the disease, where the meanings are always constructed and shared with people belonging to the social microcosm of the subject. Narrating this experience is, to some extent, revealing the cultural values of a society.