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Why Wellness Sells Summary

Why Wellness Sells: Natural Health in a Pharmaceutical Culture by Colleen Derkatch (Toronto Metropolitan University)

How and why the idea of wellness holds such rhetoricaland harmfulpower.

In Why Wellness Sells, Colleen Derkatch examines why the concept of wellness holds such rhetorical power in contemporary culture. Public interest in wellness is driven by two opposing philosophies of health that cycle into and amplify each other: restoration, where people use natural health products to restore themselves to prior states of wellness; and enhancement, where people strive for maximum wellness by optimizing their body's systems and functions.

Why Wellness Sells tracks the tension between these two ideas of wellness across a variety of sources, including interviews, popular and social media, advertising, and online activism. Derkatch examines how wellness manifests across multiple domains, where being "well" means different things, ranging from a state of pre-illness to an empowered act of good consumer-citizenship, from physical or moral purification to sustenance and care, and from harm reduction to optimization. Along the way, Derkatch demonstrates that the idea of wellness may promise access to the good life, but it serves primarily as a strategy for coping with a devastating and overwhelming present.

Drawing on scholarship in the rhetoric of health and medicine, the health and medical humanities, and related fields, Derkatch offers a nuanced account of how language, belief, behavior, experience, and persuasion collide to produce and promote wellness, one of the most compellingand harmfulconcepts that govern contemporary Western life. She explains that wellness has become so pervasive in the United States and Canada because it is an ever-moving, and thus unachievable, goal. The concept of wellness entrenches an individualist model of health as a personal responsibility, when collectivist approaches would more readily serve the health and well-being of whole populations.

Why Wellness Sells Reviews

'Wellness is ever present in lives increasingly lived in crisis,' Colleen Derkatch writes in her book Why Wellness Sells. Wellness, she argues, presents collective social ills as problems for the individual to solve through some alchemy of consumer behavior.
The Guardian

About Colleen Derkatch (Toronto Metropolitan University)

Colleen Derkatch (TORONTO, ON) is an associate professor in the Department of English at Toronto Metropolitan University and the author of Bounding Biomedicine: Evidence and Rhetoric in the New Science of Alternative Medicine.

Table of Contents

Acknowledgments
Introduction
Chapter One. Wellness as Incipient Illness
Chapter Two. Wellness as Self-Management
Chapter Three. Wellness as Harm Reduction
Chapter Four. Wellness as Survival Strategy
Chapter Five. Wellness as Optimization
Chapter Six. Wellness as Performance
Conclusion
Notes
Bibliography
Index

Additional information

NPB9781421445281
9781421445281
142144528X
Why Wellness Sells: Natural Health in a Pharmaceutical Culture by Colleen Derkatch (Toronto Metropolitan University)
New
Hardback
Johns Hopkins University Press
2023-02-07
272
N/A
Book picture is for illustrative purposes only, actual binding, cover or edition may vary.
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