Beyond ‘heightism’ and ‘height premium’: An anthropology and sociology of human stature

Author:

Lasco Gideon1234ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Knowledge, Technology and Innovation Group (KTI) Wageningen University and Research Wageningen The Netherlands

2. Department of Anthropology University of the Philippines Diliman Quezon City Philippines

3. Development Studies Program Ateneo de Manila University Quezon City Philippines

4. Department of the History of Science Harvard University Cambridge Massachusetts USA

Abstract

AbstractThis review article examines the meanings and materialities of human stature, from serving as a marker of human difference to shaping the socio‐spatial experiences of individuals. I introduce existing perspectives on height from various disciplines, including biomedical discourses on the factors (e.g. nutrition, genetics) that determine height, economic discourses on how the average heights of populations have changed over time, sociobiological and psychological discourses that assume a pre‐cultural, evolutionary “height premium”, and popular discourses on heightism and height discrimination. Drawing from a diverse range of scholarship since Saul Feldman called for a “sociology of stature” in the 1970s, I then present ways in which height and height differences have figured in various domains of human experience, from employment and education to sports and social relationships. Finally, I survey people's attempts to become taller or shorter, and the implicit values that inform such height‐making practices. What these figurations and practices show, I argue, is that height intersects with notions of race, class, gender, and beauty – but is irreducible to any of them, and is thus best viewed as a distinct, embodied form of distinction, difference, and inequality. I conclude by proposing a research agenda for future work.

Funder

Wageningen University and Research

Publisher

Wiley

Subject

General Social Sciences

Reference193 articles.

1. Meanings, preferences, and power among men having sex with men in Manila;Acaba J.;Philippine Social Sciences Review,2013

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