| Title | Obesity and the Representation of the Male Body in American Literature |
|---|---|
| DOI | https://doi.org/10.18690/um.ff.6.2026.6 |
| Landing page | https://press.um.si/index.php/ump/en/catalog/book/1110/chapter/1138 |
| License | https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ |
| Copyright | University of Maribor, University of Maribor Press |
| Publisher | University of Maribor Press |
| Published on | 2026-05-19 |
| Long abstract | Locating representations of the male body in literature has traditionally proven more difficult than tracing representations of the female body, which have been extensively theorized since the emergence of feminist criticism in the 1970s. This paper examines the representation of the obese male body in contemporary American literature, focusing on Louis Gallo’s long poem “Fat Man at the Aquarium” alongside Raymond Carver’s short story “Fat.” While obesity is frequently framed within cultural discourse as abnormal or aberrant, this study explores how literary form mediates such judgments. Through a comparative analysis, the paper argues that Carver’s minimalist narrative contains bodily difference through restraint and exteriorization, whereas Gallo’s poem radicalizes the gaze, transforming the obese male body into a site of anxiety, projection, and symbolic violence. Read together, these texts illuminate how regimes of bodily normativity shape the visibility, interpretation, and dehumanization of the obese male body in modern American culture. |
| Print length | 14 pages |
| Language | English (Original) |
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Kristina Kočan is an assistant Professor in the Department of Translation Studies at the University of Maribor, Slovenia. She holds a PhD in American Poetry. Her research focuses on American literature, translation and and cultural studies, with particular emphasis on poetry translation, gender, and the intersections of poetics and subjectivity. She has published articles in national and international journals and regularly presents her work at international conferences. She is also an award-winning poet and translator and has translated numerous works of literature. Her current research engages with questions of voice, subjectivity, and representation in American literary and cultural contexts. Maribor, Slovenia. E-mail: kristina.kocan@um.si