Last Page: Weight of the World
The battle of the bulge goes global.
- By Niranjana Iyer
- Smithsonian magazine, August 2006, Subscribe
(Page 2 of 2)
Slimmigrants, beware!
Satellite television and globalization had changed the city I grew up in: in the five years I'd been away, skim milk had replaced the heavy cream of middle-class India, and those cushiony Bollywood heroines had been supplanted by supermodels whose hipbones could shred lettuce.
It seemed that every girl in Chennai was wearing trousers (and the girls' waists seemed no bigger round than a CD). The neighborhood video-rental store had become a fitness center. Even my aunt had bought a stationary bike (which she rode very competently in her sari).
My mother said she was glad to see me looking so nice and healthy. Time to go on a diet, I realized. I opted for the Mediterranean one—I love pizza.
Subscribe now for more of Smithsonian's coverage on history, science and nature.









Comments (1)
Nina:...I think I prefer Niranjana...I do not speak a language other than English...and sometimes I am wanting at that too. So let me use the name of Indian origin...How can a young woman find jeans that fit and save her self image and comfort. I was always a "Husky Boy"...I was too tall to be called stout...sometimes I was too Bulemic to be called naturally slim or wiry. I raced at the highest levels of the "Lightweight" category...How can being a "LIghtweight"...be both a put down and a wide demand of culture. I love the term "Slimmigrant"...I have heard about how in Africa, my quite normally sized friend is called underweight, scrawny and unattractive. If I continue to choose to lose pounds or kilos I hope it is only so that I can run further without being injured or fatigued. Great to read your piece for the Smithsonian...talk soon, Sean
Posted by Sean Dowd on January 23,2008 | 05:13 PM