Abstract
This study explores how fat female employees engage in identity work to manage stigmatizing expectations grounded in healthism and obesity discourse that construct fat people as unhealthy, stupid, unprofessional, and lazy. We interviewed 22 women who self-identified as fat, full-figured or obese. Our analysis reveals how our participants engaged in identity work strategies in order to project a professional appearance and highlight their work performances. Many strategies reproduced dominant notions about fatness such as ‘smartening up’ ‘distracting’ ‘hiding’ ‘concealing’ ‘humour’ ‘compensating’ ‘explaining’ and ‘defensive Othering’. Yet at times some participants also used strategies that challenged dominant discourses about size, such as ‘flaunting’ ‘irony’ and ‘self-acceptance’. The identity work strategies our participants engaged in were not just narrative; many involved what they did with their bodies. We therefore argue the need for further theorizing embodied identity work, specifically with regards to how size matters in the context of employment.
| Original language | English |
|---|---|
| Pages (from-to) | 46-55 |
| Journal | Scandinavian Journal of Management |
| Volume | 35 |
| Issue number | 1 |
| DOIs | |
| Publication status | Published - Mar 2019 |
Keywords
- Body
- Diversity
- Fat employees
- Gender
- Identity work
- Neo-liberal healthism
- Obesity discourse
- Stigma