In this study I employed discourse analysis to analyze the discourse of the "epidemic of obesity" in the Globe and Mail. A sample of twelve articles was theoretically selected from a pool of 117 published between 1979 and 2004. There were three major themes: the nature of obesity, the causes for obesity, and the implications of obesity. I identified a discursive struggle between individual and societal explanations, which creates a contested domain for our understandings of obesity. I also identified nine apparent "truths" about obesity. Finally, I concluded that the discourse of the epidemic of obesity is fundamentally a moral discourse, with the implication that fatness is bad for individual health and for society. Obesity is constructed as an unbearable burden to our economy and our publicly-funded health care system, thus publicly-funded health care is perceived as unsustainable in the context of this crisis of obesity. |