Weighting for Health: Management, Measurement and Self-surveillance in the Modern Household - PubMed
Weighting for Health: Management, Measurement and Self-surveillance in the Modern Household
Roberta Bivins et al. Soc Hist Med. 2016 Nov.
Abstract
Histories of late nineteenth- and early twentieth-century medicine emphasise the rise of professional and scientific authority, and suggest a decline in domestic health initiatives. Exploring the example of weight management in Britain, we argue that domestic agency persisted and that new regimes of measurement and weighing were adapted to personal and familial preferences as they entered the household. Drawing on print sources and objects ranging from prescriptive literature to postcards and 'personal weighing machines', the article examines changing practices of self-management as cultural norms initially dictated by ideals of body shape and function gradually incorporated quantified targets. In the twentieth century, the domestic management of health-like the medical management of illness-was increasingly technologised and re-focused on quantitative indicators of 'normal' or 'pathological' embodiment. We ask: in relation to weight, how did quantification permeate the household, and what did this domestication of bodily surveillance mean to lay users?
Keywords: health; household; measurement; self-surveillance; weight.
Figures

Geo. Salter & Co. Ltd., ‘I use a Salter . . .’ 1947, various publications <
http://www.gracesguide.co.uk/File:Im1947MHI-Salter.jpg> accessed 31 July 2013. Courtesy, Grace's Guide to British Industrial History.

Geo. Salter & Co. Ltd., ‘The Modern Way is to Weigh Every Day’, 1960, various publications, <
http://www.gracesguide.co.uk/File:Im196003IHX-Salter.jpg> accessed 31 July 2013. Courtesy, Grace's Guide to British Industrial History.
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