Features & Details
Primary Category: Fine Art
Additional Categories Health & Fitness, Arts & Photography Books
Project Option: 5×8 in, 13×20 cm
# of Pages: 118

Author ········· Ally Zlatar
Medium ········· Print
Published ······ 2026
Language ······· English
Ebook ASIN ........... B0GZJ247GC
Global ISBN ........... 9798240569890






the philosophy of thin




What can we learn from someone who starves?

Is an eating disorder an act of resistance against societal norms, or a form of compliance with them?

Where do we draw the line?

The Philosophy of Thin presents a deeply personal yet intellectually rigorous exploration of eating disorders; reframing them not merely as clinical conditions but as complex ethical, philosophical, and cultural phenomena. Written through a blend of lived experience, philosophical analysis, and artistic reflection, Dr. Ally Zlatar invites us through her decade-long struggle with an eating disorder while interrogating broader questions surrounding autonomy, identity, desire, and embodiment.

At its core, the book argues that eating disorders are not simply about food or appearance, but about control, meaning-making, and the human struggle to exist within a body shaped by both internal desires and external pressures. Thinness is portrayed as both a personal pursuit and a culturally constructed ideal, imbued with moral and aesthetic significance. The author situates this pursuit within a long philosophical tradition, drawing connections to thinkers who have grappled with the nature of the self.


 


Ebook


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Zlatar iterates how restriction, craving, and punishment become rituals that both sustain and destroy meaning. For those with eating disorders, everyday decisions such as eating or abstaining from it become morally and existentially charged and can be examined as sites of both control and crisis. However, mainstream discourse often neglects this in our medical and ethical approaches to those with eating disorders.

The Philosophy of Thin confronts the ethical challenges of treatment, ranging from force-feeding and coercive inpatient practices to whether they preserve life or violate autonomy. She argues that recovery cannot be imposed externally; it must emerge from an individual’s own desire to live differently. Zlatar iterates that if one chooses to “recover,” it must be collaborative with practioners. Through her art and writing, she provides a framework for understanding the complex reality of living in an “ill” body'. Through this lens, she calls for a reimagining of eating disorders beyond pathology, where art plays a central role. Recovery is not just a medical process but, in this sense, is defined by our actions and shaped by ongoing ethical and creative acts of becoming.






        

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