"The Weight of Obesity is a wonderful book. It is a book that invites the reader to read aloud brilliant insights and moving, sometimes truly piercing observations. The book contrasts myriads of local intricacies with the global health attempts at ‘treating obesity’. The book links eating practices to such heterogeneous things as pesticides, traditional social obligations of food preparation, the workings of bodies, global politics and hunger, fortified sugar, the beauty of fatness, and racism. This is done with great sensitivity for the particular ways the language of her informants frames practices of eating, health, and happiness. The book is rica, the Guatemalan word for delicious, tasteful, rich."—Jeannette Pols Somatosphere
"Emily Yates-Doerr gives us an anthropologist’s tough analysis of how one resource-poor Guatemalan population responds to an increasingly globalized food supply as it transitions rapidly from widespread hunger and malnutrition to the increasing prevalence of obesity and its health consequences.
The Weight of Obesity views this 'nutrition transition' from the unusually revealing perspective of an insider who experienced it personally with eyes wide open." —Marion Nestle, author of
Food Politics: How the Food Industry Influences Nutrition and Health "Yates-Doerr skillfully interweaves theory and ethnographic evidence in showing what happens when U.S. nutrition science and public health campaigns to address 'obesity' are imported to indigenous Guatemala, with its very different language, culinary culture, and political history. This will be a model ethnography for students of anthropology, and particularly anthropology of science." —Heather Paxson, author of
The Life of Cheese: Crafting Food and Value in America "This book presents an important and novel perspective on the body, nutrition, and health in the complicated social landscape of western Guatemala. Yates-Doerr uncovers the complex and contradictory ways that the scientific metrics of nutrition intersect with local culinary traditions and modern food preferences to produce both malnutrition and obesity." —Edward F. Fischer, author of
The Good Life: Aspiration, Dignity, and the Anthropology of Wellbeing "In this finely nuanced ethnographic account of nutritional counseling in Xela, Guatemala, Yates-Doerr shows how the ostensible simplicity of ideas to eat more of one food group and less of another can not only be terribly opaque but can also inflict a unique sort of violence." —Julie Guthman, author of
Weighing In: Obesity, Food Justice, and the Limits of Capitalism "Reading this book is a riveting ethnographic journey into the rich cultural meanings and devastating social consequences of the 'nutrition' revolution in Guatemala. It is full of brilliant insights that turn conventional understanding on its head. Readers will never think about health, diet, nutrition, weight gain, or obesity the same way again. Based on extensive field research, Yates-Doerr has produced a tour de force: an ethnography that joins deep cultural understanding with astute analysis of the powerful global interests at play."—Emily Martin, author of
The Woman in the Body: A Cultural Analysis of Reproduction "This is a truly remarkable book. It resists reductionist accounts, exploring instead what it is to weigh bodies and use numbers. It avoids conceptual closures, laying out instead how
obese (a problem) differs from
fat (a strength). Its rich stories about food and care will etch themselves in your soul." —Annemarie Mol, author of
The Logic of Care: Health and the Problem of Patient Choice