
Typically, when we hear the term ‘eating disorder’, we conjure up an image of an emaciated young woman refusing to eat. But for the vast majority of people, this simply isn’t what an eating disorder looks like.
In fact, anorexia nervosa is the rarest (although, according to many studies, the most deadly) of all eating disorders. Binge eating disorder is the most common, followed by bulimia nervosa, and a large number of people who experience eating disorder symptoms don’t actually fit within a diagnostic category at all.
These individuals might engage in extreme exercise, or fast for days on end, without having a BMI low enough to be diagnosed with anorexia.
Despite this, rhetoric around eating disorders continues to portray them in a one dimensional light. In pop culture, these problems are routinely characterised by calorie restriction and extreme thinness, excluding a majority of sufferers from the conversation.
But a recent video on ATTN, featuring Nev Schulman (from MTV‘s Catfish), has garnered a substantial amount of criticism for promoting a dangerously narrow definition of eating disorders. And these criticisms demonstrate the strong divide between the media’s portrayal of eating disorders and the lived reality of them.
Captioned ‘Eating disorders are a mental illness, not a diet gone wrong,’ the video included lines like, “In this psychiatric illness, they’re controlling what they eat,” and, “Share this if you believe eating disorders need to be taken more seriously,” as well as a series of images of skeletal young people.