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Visual (Mis)Representations on Sports and Weight Loss: A Multimodal Critical Discourse Study of Images in Official Health Posts on WeChat in China

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Visual (Mis)Representations on Sports and Weight Loss: A Multimodal Critical Discourse Study of Images in Official Health Posts on WeChat in China. / Li, Run; Huang, Xiang.
In: Health Communication, 14.07.2025, p. 1-13.

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Li R, Huang X. Visual (Mis)Representations on Sports and Weight Loss: A Multimodal Critical Discourse Study of Images in Official Health Posts on WeChat in China. Health Communication. 2025 Jul 14;1-13. Epub 2025 Jul 14. doi: 10.1080/10410236.2025.2529985

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@article{ac2c28719b6246ea8cbf072764c3a0cb,
title = "Visual (Mis)Representations on Sports and Weight Loss: A Multimodal Critical Discourse Study of Images in Official Health Posts on WeChat in China",
abstract = "In response to physical inactivity and rising levels of obesity among the population, the Chinese government has used social media, such as WeChat, to engage and encourage the public to do sports in order to lose weight and maintain health. Images in official social media posts on sports and weight loss constitute an important, but currently underexplored site. Using multimodal critical discourse analysis (MCDA), this paper examines the images in the posts in “健康中国 (Healthy China),” the official WeChat account of the National Health Commission of the People{\textquoteright}s Republic of China, on sports and weight loss. It is found that the images employ medical-style discursive features to establish authority on sport. Neoliberal themes of individual responsibility and competition also emerge, framing sports as self-improvement and a personal obligation. Moreover, female figures dominate, and often are depicted in alignment with societal thinness ideals, reinforcing gendered body norms and anxiety. We suggest that the discourses in the official media may lead to certain misrepresentations, obscuring structural barriers to sports, and perpetuating sports anxiety and weight biases in the society, especially among women.",
author = "Run Li and Xiang Huang",
year = "2025",
month = jul,
day = "14",
doi = "10.1080/10410236.2025.2529985",
language = "English",
pages = "1--13",
journal = "Health Communication",
issn = "1532-7027",
publisher = "Taylor & Francis",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Visual (Mis)Representations on Sports and Weight Loss

T2 - A Multimodal Critical Discourse Study of Images in Official Health Posts on WeChat in China

AU - Li, Run

AU - Huang, Xiang

PY - 2025/7/14

Y1 - 2025/7/14

N2 - In response to physical inactivity and rising levels of obesity among the population, the Chinese government has used social media, such as WeChat, to engage and encourage the public to do sports in order to lose weight and maintain health. Images in official social media posts on sports and weight loss constitute an important, but currently underexplored site. Using multimodal critical discourse analysis (MCDA), this paper examines the images in the posts in “健康中国 (Healthy China),” the official WeChat account of the National Health Commission of the People’s Republic of China, on sports and weight loss. It is found that the images employ medical-style discursive features to establish authority on sport. Neoliberal themes of individual responsibility and competition also emerge, framing sports as self-improvement and a personal obligation. Moreover, female figures dominate, and often are depicted in alignment with societal thinness ideals, reinforcing gendered body norms and anxiety. We suggest that the discourses in the official media may lead to certain misrepresentations, obscuring structural barriers to sports, and perpetuating sports anxiety and weight biases in the society, especially among women.

AB - In response to physical inactivity and rising levels of obesity among the population, the Chinese government has used social media, such as WeChat, to engage and encourage the public to do sports in order to lose weight and maintain health. Images in official social media posts on sports and weight loss constitute an important, but currently underexplored site. Using multimodal critical discourse analysis (MCDA), this paper examines the images in the posts in “健康中国 (Healthy China),” the official WeChat account of the National Health Commission of the People’s Republic of China, on sports and weight loss. It is found that the images employ medical-style discursive features to establish authority on sport. Neoliberal themes of individual responsibility and competition also emerge, framing sports as self-improvement and a personal obligation. Moreover, female figures dominate, and often are depicted in alignment with societal thinness ideals, reinforcing gendered body norms and anxiety. We suggest that the discourses in the official media may lead to certain misrepresentations, obscuring structural barriers to sports, and perpetuating sports anxiety and weight biases in the society, especially among women.

U2 - 10.1080/10410236.2025.2529985

DO - 10.1080/10410236.2025.2529985

M3 - Journal article

SP - 1

EP - 13

JO - Health Communication

JF - Health Communication

SN - 1532-7027

ER -