This is an enlightening & entertaining social history of how we have tried (and failed) to battle the bulge over two millennia. Today we are urged from all sides to slim down & shape up to shed a few pounds or lose life-threatening stones. The media's relentless obsession with size may be perceived as a twenty-first-century phenomenon but as award-winning historian Louise Foxcroft shows we have been struggling with what to eat when & how much ever since the Greeks & the Romans first pinched an inch. Meticulously researched surprising & sometimes shocking Calories & Corsets tells the epic story of our complicated relationship with food the fashions & fads of body shape & how cultural beliefs & social norms have changed over time. Combining research from medical journals letters articles & the dieting bestsellers we continue to devour (including one by an octogenarian Italian in the sixteenth century) Foxcroft reveals the extreme & often absurd lengths people will go to in order to achieve the perfect body from eating carbolic soap to chewing every morsel hundreds of times to a tasteless pulp. This unique & witty history exposes the myths & anxieties that drive today's multi-billion pound dieting industry
- & offers a welcome perspective on how we can be healthy & happy in our bodies.