University of California - Santa Barbara

04/09/2024 | Press release | Distributed by Public on 04/09/2024 18:07

Author measures memoir’s potential impacts on readers with eating disorders

Author measures memoir's potential impacts on readers with eating disorders

September 4, 2024

Share this article

When Emily Troscianko finished writing a memoir about anorexia and recovery, she was concerned it might do more harm than good - afterall, her own research in the realms of health humanities and cognitive literary studies had shown that readers with eating disorders are often triggered by such narratives. So she tested her own book before deciding whether to publish it.

With collaborators Rocío Riestra-Camacho and James Carney, Troscianko - who is a visiting scholarin the Literature and Mindprogram at UC Santa Barbara and it's Trauma-Informed Pedagogy project - ran an experiment with more than 60 readers, assessing the severity of their eating disorder and their attitudes about their illness before and after reading the book, "The Very Hungry Anorexic."

"If reading the memoir did harm beyond a pre-registered level, the book would not be published," said Troscianko (pictured), a research associate at The Oxford Research Centre in the Humanities (TORCH). Her book passed the test; the details of the team's test study were recently published in the Journal of Eating Disorders.

Image

"The methods and findings generate some important questions and answers regarding authorial responsibility, the positive and negative health effects that can result from narrative reading, and the interplay of academic research with personal and professional priorities," Troscianko said.

Tags

Books

Share this article

About UC Santa Barbara

The University of California, Santa Barbara is a leading research institution that also provides a comprehensive liberal arts learning experience. Our academic community of faculty, students, and staff is characterized by a culture of interdisciplinary collaboration that is responsive to the needs of our multicultural and global society. All of this takes place within a living and learning environment like no other, as we draw inspiration from the beauty and resources of our extraordinary location at the edge of the Pacific Ocean.

What's Current

Image
Photo Credit
David W. Lawson
A focus group of young men in Tanzania, led by project co-investigator Alexander Ishungisa (standing) and social scientist Elisha Mabula. (Photograph shared with participant consent.)
Image
Photo Credit
Laila Shereen Sakr
VJ Um Amel, "Boys on the Gaza Beach," digital mosaic, 2014
Image
Photo Credit
James Badham
Yangying Zhu (right), assistant professor in the UCSB Mechanical Engineering Department, receives her award certificate from ARPA-E Program Director Dr. Evelyn Wang at the National Academy of Sciences, in Washington, D.C.