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Bodies (BIG IDEAS//small books) by Susie…
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Bodies (BIG IDEAS//small books) (original 2009; edition 2009)

by Susie Orbach (Author)

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2325115,749 (3.98)1
Orbach diagnoses the crisis in our relationship to our bodies, and points the way toward a process of healing.
Member:CalebLiu82
Title:Bodies (BIG IDEAS//small books)
Authors:Susie Orbach (Author)
Info:Picador (2009), Edition: Original, 224 pages
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Bodies by Susie Orbach (2009)

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English (4)  German (1)  All languages (5)
Showing 4 of 4
This was very good. I'm a mailman with two eyes for detail, so looking at the neverending stream of photoshopped Lifestyle and Fitness magazines keeps me considering parts of this book.

This series is great so far. I rec both this & the Kostenbaum.
  Adammmmm | Sep 10, 2019 |
In this short book, renowned psychologist Susie Orbach discusses how our bodies have become a commodity, something to be altered by surgery, weight loss, make up, etc. Social media has reinforced ideas of the perfect body, and anyone who doesn’t have one (i.e., most of us) is made to feel that it is our fault and that we need to change it to be accepted. Our body is no longer somewhere to live from, but a commodity to prove our worth in the world. In Scandinavia, women who think they are too tall are having their femur broken and reset to make them shorter; in China, people who think they are too short can have a metal rod inserted to make them taller; women are having plastic surgery to shrink their waist and enlarge their breasts, while men are having surgery to increase the length and girth of their penis. Something has gone very askew in the way we view our own bodies.

Orbach also examines extreme cases such as Andrew, a physically healthy man who felt that he could only be happy if he had his legs amputated, and she looks at the psychology behind such stories.

It’s a short book at 145 pages and is something of an introduction to the ideas contained within, rather than a full scale investigation, but it makes for fascinating reading, talking about how the dieting industry is based on failure and plays on people’s insecurities. This is a book to make you think, it’s a book to make you angry, and it’s a book that everyone should read. Fascinating and highly recommended. ( )
  Ruth72 | Jun 6, 2019 |
Every 'body' ought to read this book. Frightening exposure of consumer culture taking over the comfort we all feel in our bodies. It's like how torturers take over control of a victim's body! Author reinforces that bodies are for living our lives in. However, all over the world, people are transforming, perfecting, doing-over, vomiting, cutting out so as to fit into the ideal Wester image. Beauty is missing; humans are being tricked into homogenizing their physicality. The feeling of being discontent is a manufactured discontent so that we all go to gyms, buy into weight loss schemes, feel bad about ourselves and keep the weight loss, cosmetic surgery, cosmetic industries afloat. And there's more....about body transference in psychoanalysis, loss, the future, parenting. ( )
1 vote authorknows | Apr 5, 2009 |
Glad I read this book, and will go back to it again. I can do no better than quote from WIlliam Leith's review in the Guardian - "Reading this book made me think: our system makes us want things until we're so damaged that we can't go on, and it's showing on our skinny, obese, scarred, tattooed, pierced and hated bodies. And now it looks like the system is breaking down. Which might be good news for bodies." ( )
1 vote VegAnne | Feb 14, 2009 |
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» Add other authors (3 possible)

Author nameRoleType of authorWork?Status
Susie Orbachprimary authorall editionscalculated
Appignanesi, LisaEditorsecondary authorsome editionsconfirmed
Hopkinson, CharliePhotographersecondary authorsome editionsconfirmed
Lopez, DocPhotographersecondary authorsome editionsconfirmed
Mogford, DanDesignersecondary authorsome editionsconfirmed

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Orbach diagnoses the crisis in our relationship to our bodies, and points the way toward a process of healing.

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