Monday, October 22, 2012


Strive Towards Perfection 
By: Zeina Jabali

Before Title IX was passed, one in every 27 high school girls played sports, but in the post Title IX world we live in today 1 in 2.5 does. Courtney E. Martin, recognizes and appreciates this Laws’ greatness in her article, but she focuses on the negative effects of female athleticism and dedication, specifically anorexia.  Martin introduces her readers to two very interesting women who have fallen victim to the temptation of the perfect athletic body. Martin describes Wendy as extremely and obsessively dedicated to basketball, she saw loss as “a challenge from God” (Martin 240) provoking her to be more determined and focused as ever. This led to her anorexia. Kimberly is another female athlete who loved a challenge, and worked hard to achieve her goal. As time went on, and as she continued to condition her body and eat less and less, she had come to weigh 70 pounds at five feet two (Martin 232). Kim’s need for competition and a challenge was actually what brought her out of her perpetual darkness when her therapist suggested she start seeing gaining weight as a challenge. The media places heavy emphasis on what it means to have an athletic body. “Olympic and professional athletes from America, Canada, and Australia have posed naked or nearly naked in Sports Illustrated, Maxim, [and] Playboy…” making fourteen-to eighteen year olds feel negative about their own bodies (Martin 226). Kimiko Hirai Soldati was a 2004 Olympic Diver who was “purging pretty much everything [she] ate. [She] was so obsessed about calories that [she] didn't want to chew gum because there are 5 calories in a stick” (Hellmich). Before reading this article I was completely oblivious to the fact that female athletes suffered from anorexia athletica. Maybe it’s another cultural differentiation, but growing up in Kuwait you rarely ever hear of anyone suffering from eating disorders.
We have learnt in class that appearance, whether of males or females, can be used as an intimation of morality and values; “flesh or fat on the body has been framed as a signifier of excessiveness and being out of control, but it is also a particularly strong devaluation of the feminine and is viewed as failed individual morality…” (Dworkin 107). This has become a basic norm of our society. However, in the case of pregnant woman I believe we have surpassed the level of unattainable and unacceptable ideals of perfection. In “Getting Your Body Back” Dworkin and Wachs, discuss media’s role in the body image of pregnant woman. They also explore shifts in the woman’s role: from house care and child rearing to fitness plans to fix their “aesthetically problematic” bodies. In efforts to fix such unruly sights, maternity brands such as Pea in the Pod and Eva Alexander have designed lingerie lines advocating that pregnant women can empower themselves by choosing not to dress in maternal clothing. After conducting a simple Google search for “Pregnancy Wardrobe” I found a website designed to help soon to be mothers stay in their non-maternal clothes for as long as possible. The media has led women into believing that fitness regimes will empower them by giving them back control of their bodies. This is, in part, due to the fact that pregnant woman are perceived as slightly unfeminine, which is perplexing to me because the essence of a woman is expressed through her ability to carry another life; this feat is more than empowering in itself. 

4 comments:

  1. Anna Grofik
    Like Zeina said, weight gain was seen as a challenge to be beaten by Wendy. This idea of being in a fight against your own body combined with the bombardment of unrealistic standards in athleticism make many female athletes susceptible to eating disorders. Due to the competitive nature of sports, this competition can transfer out of the game and into the way athletes view their bodies. I found it interesting in the article that when one of the girls on a team started to lose weight and spiral towards anorexia, the other girls on the team subtly started to follow suit and compete with one another over who weighed the least. This circumstance shows the powerful influence of athletic teams and the acceptance of harmful eating practices to achieve new levels of athleticism.
    I agree with Zeina in the idea that overweightness is seen as “failed individual morality” in our society, but it surprised me that this was taken into account concerning pregnancy. For example, Zeina’s discovery of a website dedicated to ensuring the size restriction of pregnant women in helping them “stay in their non-maternity clothes” goes to show that even when harboring new life, women are judged unfit and unseemly.

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  2. To expand off of what Zeina and Anna said, I was really affected by Martin's telling of her own high school basketball team, the telling was intimate and very relatable. I instantly grasped on to the section of the article that addressed "Sisterhood" among teams and other groupings of girls, and all the team dinners that were retold. I think it is fair to say that when I go to dinner and I have far more food on my plate than any of the girls at the table, I take notice. Although we are completely different and have different dietary needs, I am comparing myself to them constantly, granted, I always eat my food but not without thinking about it all first. There is a competition and comradery that I think is inherent in any group of girls (or women!) I think this transcends from food to exercise and beyond to boyfriends and grades. Martin also reflected on this in her introduction when she commented on the new "perfect" that all girls are trying to achieve, and the consequences for example, eating disorders, that come out of these expectations. --Gracie Hall

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  3. I agree with zeina about how the anorexia in women's sports is ridiculous. Hearing about athletes trying to watch their weight and then compete at their highest level is disheartening. A man doesn't have to worry about this because most of the time they are trying to gain weight unless they are wrestling. The quote about the olympic athlete watching her calories and not even chewing gum is ridiculous. To have an olympic athlete be that insecure about her weight is something that I never thought of.

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