Wellness as virtue: Morality and the pursuit of health
- 1 September 1994
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Springer Nature in Culture, Medicine, and Psychiatry
- Vol. 18 (3), 385-401
- https://doi.org/10.1007/bf01379232
Abstract
The interest and participation in health promotion and wellness activities has expanded greatly in the past two decades. The “wellness revolution”, especially in terms of diet and exercise, has been affected by both scientific findings and cultural changes. The paper examines how a particular aspect of culture, the moral meanings of health-promoting activities, contribute to the pursuit of wellness. Based on interviews with 54 self-identified wellness participants at a major university, we examine how health can be a moral discourse and the body a site for moral action. The paper suggests that wellness seekers engage in a profoundly moral discourse around health promotion, constructing a moral world of goods, bads and shoulds. Although there are some gender differences in particular wellness goals, engaging in wellness activities, independent of results, becomes seen as a good in itself. Thus, even apart from any health outcomes, the pursuit of virtue and a moral lifeis fundamentally an aspect of the pursuit of wellness.Keywords
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