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  1. The Affirmative Culture of Healthy Self-Care: A Feminist Critique of the Good Health Imperative.Talia Welsh - 2020 - International Journal of Feminist Approaches to Bioethics 13 (1):27-44.
    Feminists have worked extensively to explore how our contemporary capitalist and neoliberal world creates docile subjects. One feature of this docility is the focus on fostering subjects that not only are good consumers and workers but also subjects that make good choices—that is, choices that do not disrupt capitalist postcolonial distributions of wealth, power, and control. One example of this trend is the focus in public health discourses in the last several decades of seeing unhealthy bodies as objects that need (...)
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  • Food Choices and Gut Issues.Jane Dryden - 2021 - Feminist Philosophy Quarterly 7 (3).
    People with gut issues are often constrained in the foods they are able to eat. The choices they are able to make about food, however, are shaped not merely by specific medical and dietary needs but also by social, relational, and environmental factors such as the presence of trusted and supportive others who take their needs seriously. Drawing on work in disability theory and relational autonomy, as well as interviews undertaken in summer 2019, the paper explores the ways that choices (...)
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  • Time to Eat: The Importance of Temporality for Food Ethics.Megan Dean - 2022 - International Journal of Feminist Approaches to Bioethics 15 (2):76-98.
    Lack of time is a commonly reported barrier to healthy eating, but a literal lack of time is only one way that time may compromise eating well. This article explores how the first-personal lived experience of time shapes and is shaped by eating. I draw upon phenomenology and feminist theory to argue that the dynamic relationship between eating and temporality matters for food ethics. Specifically, temporalities and related ways of eating can be better or worse vis-à-vis key ethical concerns. I (...)
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  • Continental feminism.Jennifer Hansen - 2013 - Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy.
  • Continental feminism.Ann J. Cahill - 2008 - Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy.
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