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Fat Studies
An Interdisciplinary Journal of Body Weight and Society
Volume 13, 2024 - Issue 1
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Research Article

Fat and deserving: navigating the visibility and visuality of non-normative bodies in online medical crowdfunding

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ABSTRACT

Medical crowdfunding is an individualizing and privatizing response to healthcare inequalities, in which citizens use online platforms to share (written and visual) stories about health-related needs in order to elicit donations. We present data from a study of medical crowdfunding in Aotearoa New Zealand, drawing on critical theory and fat studies to analyze weight-loss-related campaigns, with a focus on visibility and visuality. We highlight the complexities involved in making fat (and otherwise non-normative) bodies acceptable, marketable, and deserving to online audiences. Through a reflexive thematic analysis of text and images, across nineteen public Givealittle campaigns related to intentional weight loss, we identified five main themes relating to how the fat body was presented. These themes include: unwell bodies, transitional bodies, active bodies, objectified bodies, and wretched bodies. We show that the ability of particular bodies to generate specific moral emotions (that can, through these platforms, be turned into care/healthcare access) depends largely on their relationship to normative ideas of the “good” body. Our analysis offers insight into how people negotiate hierarchies of deservingness, based on entrenched normativities, while living in non-normative bodies. More specifically, we show how people pursuing intentional weight loss use images to regulate themselves according to a wider anti-fat and neoliberal logic of deservingness. We explore images on crowdfunding campaigns as a form of both media labor and moral labor, highlighting the double-bind of the digital gaze upon bodies that are unable to access privileged states of health without being made visible to scrutiny.

Disclosure statement

No potential conflict of interest was reported by the author(s).

Additional information

Funding

The work was supported by the Marsden Fund.

Notes on contributors

Susan Wardell

Susan Wardell is a Senior Lecturer in Social Anthropology at the University of Otago, in Dunedin, New Zealand. Her research focuses on care, moral affect, health and wellbeing, and digital sociality.

Laura Starling

Laura Starling completed her MA in Sociology at the University of Otago, and now works in secondary education. She is interested in critical perspectives on health, in neoliberal contexts, online.

Cassie Withey-Rila

Cassie Withey-Rila is an early career researcher in Public Health, at the University of Otago. Their work focuses on the experiences of trans and gender diverse adults in the healthcare system.