Reviews tagging 'Misogyny'
Fearing the Black Body: The Racial Origins of Fat Phobia by Sabrina Strings
22 reviews
eschorrlesnick's review against another edition
4.25
Graphic: Medical trauma, Fatphobia, Misogyny, and Racism
taratearex's review against another edition
5.0
This book is dense and does read somewhat like a history textbook, but it is also clear and concise and lays out the facts so well in only about 200 pages. Because it is more a presentation of the facts, there isn't much analysis so I would recommend reading this in addition to other books on anti-fat bias and racism for more of the analysis part, such as What We Don't Talk About When We Talk About Fat Aubrey Gordon and Belly of the Beast: The Politics of Anti-Fatness as Anti-Blackness Da’Shaun Harrison. But this was an excellent book on the history of how we got to where we are now and well worth the read.
I listened to the audiobook in tandem with my physical copy so that I could highlight, this was also helpful as there are a lot of names and dates which I have a harder time with if it's just audiobook.
Graphic: Fatphobia, Racism, and Body shaming
Moderate: Slavery, Sexism, Ableism, and Misogyny
leontyna's review against another edition
4.0
Graphic: Racism, Fatphobia, and Slavery
Moderate: Antisemitism and Misogyny
ravennemain's review against another edition
4.0
Graphic: Misogyny, Fatphobia, and Racism
meganmalonefranklin's review against another edition
5.0
Graphic: Religious bigotry, Slavery, Infertility, Bullying, Colonisation, Classism, Eating disorder, Fatphobia, Body shaming, Alcoholism, Antisemitism, Racism, Alcohol, Racial slurs, and Misogyny
mandkips's review against another edition
4.0
Graphic: Racism, Body shaming, and Fatphobia
Moderate: Misogyny and Eating disorder
Minor: Sexism and Ableism
puttingwingsonwords's review against another edition
5.0
It’s not long and while the language is academic, it’s not overly complicated. The audiobook was easy to follow. I haven’t listened to a lot of nonfiction audiobooks yet so I was afraid that my attention would waver, but it was the opposite: I listened for much longer stretches than I usually do because I was so intrigued.
Fearing the Black Body helps put the current discussions around antifatness into a historical context and shows how much we are still influenced by decades or centuries old ideas of eugenicist doctors and ‘race scientists’ who spouted ‘scientific’ ideas with no basis in research or reality.
Graphic: Misogyny, Racism, Antisemitism, Fatphobia, Ableism, Body shaming, and Colonisation
Moderate: Genocide, Racial slurs, and Religious bigotry
minty_3's review against another edition
4.0
Graphic: Body shaming, Misogyny, Fatphobia, Racism, Racial slurs, and Sexism
Moderate: Classism
therecoveringbookworm's review against another edition
4.0
Graphic: Fatphobia, Body shaming, Slavery, Colonisation, Racism, Sexism, and Misogyny
naturallybgrace's review against another edition
5.0
Quotes—
“…the current anti-fat bias in the United States and in much of the West was not born in the medical field. Racial scientific literature since at least the eighteenth century has claimed that fatness was ‘savage’ and ‘black.”
“The legacy of Protestant moralism and race science as it related to fat and thin persons loomed large. Indeed, many early to mid-twentieth-century physicians relied on moral and racial logics to rail against persons deemed too fat or too thin. But over time, a growing number did so specifically, and exclusively, to condemn fatness.”
“…Revealing race to be the missing element in many of these analysis’ indeed the racial discourse of fatness as coarse, immortal, black and other, not only denigrated Black women but it also served as the driver for the creation of slenderness as the proper form of embodiment for elite white christian women. In other words the fear of the black body was integral to the creation of the slender aesthetic amount fashioned white Americans.”
Moderate: Fatphobia, Religious bigotry, Misogyny, Eating disorder, Body shaming, Slavery, Sexual violence, and Racism
Because of the nature of this topic may potentially triggering things are mentioned and discussed. I’d encourage folks check in with themselves and others while reading as the content is heavy, but none the less necessary.