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Weightless: Making Space for My Resilient Body and Soul – Poignant Essays on Fat, Black Women and Cultural Expectations
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40/99
Critics
47/99
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Scholars
46/99
Rating
34/99
Volume
40/99
Rating
54/99
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About This Book
A poignant and ruthlessly honest journey through cultural expectations of size, race, and gender--and toward a brighter future--from National Book Award nominee Evette Dionne My body has not betrayed me; it has continued rebounding against all odds. It is a body that others map their expectations on, but it has never let me down. In this insightful, funny, and whip-smart book, acclaimed writer Evette Dionne explores the minefields fat Black women are forced to navigate in the course of everyday life. From her early experiences of harassment to adolescent self-discovery in internet chatrooms to diagnosis with heart failure at age twenty-nine, Dionne tracks her relationships with friendship, sex, motherhood, agoraphobia, health, pop culture, and self-image. Along the way, she lifts back the curtain to reveal the subtle, insidious forms of surveillance and control levied at fat women: At the doctor's office, where any health ailment is treated with a directive to lose weight. On dating sites, where larger bodies are rejected or fetishized. On TV, where fat characters are asexual comedic relief. But Dionne's unflinching account of our deeply held prejudices is matched by her fierce belief in the power of self-love. An unmissable portrait of a woman on a journey toward understanding our society and herself, Weightless holds up a mirror to the world we live in and asks us to imagine the future we deserve.
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Reviews
"In fact, Weightless is a testament to resilience and an offering of realistic optimism ..."
"If there is a missed opportunity in Weightless, I wish she'd have asserted more clearly not just that fat people shouldn't be subject to criticism and discrimination, but also that they have a right to exist — period ..."
"Crackling with conviction, this is an urgent call for change."
"The author argues persuasively that the media plays a huge role in promulgating negative fat-girl stereotypes ..."
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