Beauty, Eating Disorders & Size 0: A Qualitative Enquiry into Fashion's Social Responsibility

The fashion industry has popped up in academic research and the news occasionally regarding counterfeiting (Hilton et al, 2004), labour practices (Anon, 2002; Shaw et al, 2004; Nelson, 2006) and sustainability, which led to the creation of the Ethical Fashion Forum. Following recent attention, this...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Schillebeeckx, Simon J.D.
Format: Dissertation (University of Nottingham only)
Language:English
Published: 2007
Subjects:
Online Access:https://eprints.nottingham.ac.uk/20976/
_version_ 1848792160095174656
author Schillebeeckx, Simon J.D.
author_facet Schillebeeckx, Simon J.D.
author_sort Schillebeeckx, Simon J.D.
building Nottingham Research Data Repository
collection Online Access
description The fashion industry has popped up in academic research and the news occasionally regarding counterfeiting (Hilton et al, 2004), labour practices (Anon, 2002; Shaw et al, 2004; Nelson, 2006) and sustainability, which led to the creation of the Ethical Fashion Forum. Following recent attention, this dissertation investigates various discourses on the fashion industry's "corporate social responsibility" in producing an extremely body-conscious and disorderedly eating society. The current thinness-ideal has become an issue tackled by corporate pacesetters and is also addressed by some protagonists within the fashion industry, at least in their rhetoric. After exposing a tendency towards instrumentalization within CSR, I introduce the conception of issues as collectively defined. Beauty as a newly risen societal issue is than linked to thinness idealization via its 'anorexic and bulimic extremes'. This qualitative research explores five prominent discourses surrounding eating disorders and investigates how these different stories infuse fashion designer's sense of responsibility. The research aims to gain insight into how this particular stakeholdergroup feels about eating disorders, size 0 models and the different measures taken by fashion councils in various fashion capitals. Also some of designers' hidden ideological stances of power and responsibility will be exposed. I conclude by summarising the crucial contributions made regarding the issue of beauty and the therewith interwoven eating disorders. Finally, I re-imagine CSR as a noninstrumentalist industry-wide responsibility and extrapolate the ideas of beauty and eating disorders to a general perspective on the influence of the capitalist economy on the body.
first_indexed 2025-11-14T18:39:59Z
format Dissertation (University of Nottingham only)
id nottingham-20976
institution University of Nottingham Malaysia Campus
institution_category Local University
language English
last_indexed 2025-11-14T18:39:59Z
publishDate 2007
recordtype eprints
repository_type Digital Repository
spelling nottingham-209762018-05-14T07:38:01Z https://eprints.nottingham.ac.uk/20976/ Beauty, Eating Disorders & Size 0: A Qualitative Enquiry into Fashion's Social Responsibility Schillebeeckx, Simon J.D. The fashion industry has popped up in academic research and the news occasionally regarding counterfeiting (Hilton et al, 2004), labour practices (Anon, 2002; Shaw et al, 2004; Nelson, 2006) and sustainability, which led to the creation of the Ethical Fashion Forum. Following recent attention, this dissertation investigates various discourses on the fashion industry's "corporate social responsibility" in producing an extremely body-conscious and disorderedly eating society. The current thinness-ideal has become an issue tackled by corporate pacesetters and is also addressed by some protagonists within the fashion industry, at least in their rhetoric. After exposing a tendency towards instrumentalization within CSR, I introduce the conception of issues as collectively defined. Beauty as a newly risen societal issue is than linked to thinness idealization via its 'anorexic and bulimic extremes'. This qualitative research explores five prominent discourses surrounding eating disorders and investigates how these different stories infuse fashion designer's sense of responsibility. The research aims to gain insight into how this particular stakeholdergroup feels about eating disorders, size 0 models and the different measures taken by fashion councils in various fashion capitals. Also some of designers' hidden ideological stances of power and responsibility will be exposed. I conclude by summarising the crucial contributions made regarding the issue of beauty and the therewith interwoven eating disorders. Finally, I re-imagine CSR as a noninstrumentalist industry-wide responsibility and extrapolate the ideas of beauty and eating disorders to a general perspective on the influence of the capitalist economy on the body. 2007 Dissertation (University of Nottingham only) NonPeerReviewed application/pdf en https://eprints.nottingham.ac.uk/20976/1/07MAlixss25.pdf Schillebeeckx, Simon J.D. (2007) Beauty, Eating Disorders & Size 0: A Qualitative Enquiry into Fashion's Social Responsibility. [Dissertation (University of Nottingham only)] (Unpublished) beauty eating disorders corporate social responsibility fashion critical non-instrumentalist
spellingShingle beauty
eating disorders
corporate social responsibility
fashion
critical
non-instrumentalist
Schillebeeckx, Simon J.D.
Beauty, Eating Disorders & Size 0: A Qualitative Enquiry into Fashion's Social Responsibility
title Beauty, Eating Disorders & Size 0: A Qualitative Enquiry into Fashion's Social Responsibility
title_full Beauty, Eating Disorders & Size 0: A Qualitative Enquiry into Fashion's Social Responsibility
title_fullStr Beauty, Eating Disorders & Size 0: A Qualitative Enquiry into Fashion's Social Responsibility
title_full_unstemmed Beauty, Eating Disorders & Size 0: A Qualitative Enquiry into Fashion's Social Responsibility
title_short Beauty, Eating Disorders & Size 0: A Qualitative Enquiry into Fashion's Social Responsibility
title_sort beauty, eating disorders & size 0: a qualitative enquiry into fashion's social responsibility
topic beauty
eating disorders
corporate social responsibility
fashion
critical
non-instrumentalist
url https://eprints.nottingham.ac.uk/20976/