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In this raw and emotionally charged solo episode, Dr. Marianne unpacks why thinness continues to be equated with goodness in mainstream culture. Drawing on the New York Times opinion piece The Unrepentant Return of Christian Diet Culture by Jessica Grose, Dr. Marianne explores how weight loss is still moralized through religious teachings, wellness trends, and political rhetoric.
This episode critically examines the resurgence of Christian diet culture, the backlash against weight-loss medications like Ozempic, and the deeper implications of the Make America Healthy Again (MAHA) campaign led by Robert F. Kennedy Jr. Dr. Marianne reveals how these systems are not just about health, but about control, obedience, and purity. She discusses how thinness is still framed as a sign of self-discipline and spiritual worth, while fatness is treated as failure or sin.
Using a liberationist lens, Dr. Marianne also highlights the historical roots of fatphobia in white supremacy, referencing Dr. Sabrina Strings’ groundbreaking book Fearing the Black Body: The Racial Origins of Fat Phobia. This episode challenges listeners to question how religion, politics, and public health are deeply entangled in oppressive narratives about bodies and morality.
For neurodivergent people, those raised in religiously rigid environments, and anyone recovering from body shame, this conversation offers both validation and a call to resistance. You may want to listen in short segments, especially if you’re prone to sensory overload or religious trauma responses.
CONTENT CAUTION:
WHAT YOU'LL LEARN IN THIS EPISODE:
How Christian diet culture can moralize thinness and spiritualizes weight loss
Why Ozempic and similar medications are being rejected by some conservative groups
The political motives and fatphobic messaging behind MAHA
How alt-right Christian nationalism reinforces thinness as virtue
The white supremacist roots of fatphobia, based on Dr. Sabrina Strings’ research
Why these systems disproportionately harm fat, neurodivergent, disabled, and BIPOC individuals
What it means to reclaim body autonomy in a culture that demands control
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WORK WITH DR. MARIANNE:
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In this raw and emotionally charged solo episode, Dr. Marianne unpacks why thinness continues to be equated with goodness in mainstream culture. Drawing on the New York Times opinion piece The Unrepentant Return of Christian Diet Culture by Jessica Grose, Dr. Marianne explores how weight loss is still moralized through religious teachings, wellness trends, and political rhetoric.
This episode critically examines the resurgence of Christian diet culture, the backlash against weight-loss medications like Ozempic, and the deeper implications of the Make America Healthy Again (MAHA) campaign led by Robert F. Kennedy Jr. Dr. Marianne reveals how these systems are not just about health, but about control, obedience, and purity. She discusses how thinness is still framed as a sign of self-discipline and spiritual worth, while fatness is treated as failure or sin.
Using a liberationist lens, Dr. Marianne also highlights the historical roots of fatphobia in white supremacy, referencing Dr. Sabrina Strings’ groundbreaking book Fearing the Black Body: The Racial Origins of Fat Phobia. This episode challenges listeners to question how religion, politics, and public health are deeply entangled in oppressive narratives about bodies and morality.
For neurodivergent people, those raised in religiously rigid environments, and anyone recovering from body shame, this conversation offers both validation and a call to resistance. You may want to listen in short segments, especially if you’re prone to sensory overload or religious trauma responses.
CONTENT CAUTION:
WHAT YOU'LL LEARN IN THIS EPISODE:
How Christian diet culture can moralize thinness and spiritualizes weight loss
Why Ozempic and similar medications are being rejected by some conservative groups
The political motives and fatphobic messaging behind MAHA
How alt-right Christian nationalism reinforces thinness as virtue
The white supremacist roots of fatphobia, based on Dr. Sabrina Strings’ research
Why these systems disproportionately harm fat, neurodivergent, disabled, and BIPOC individuals
What it means to reclaim body autonomy in a culture that demands control
RELATED EPISODES:
WORK WITH DR. MARIANNE:
INTERESTED IN HANGING OUT MORE IN DR. MARIANNE-LAND?
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