Fat Studies in Canada: (Re)Mapping the Field re-envisions what it means to be fat in the colonial project known as Canada, exploring the unique ways that fat studies theorists, academics, artists, and activists are troubling and thickening existing fat studies literature.
Weaving together academic articles and alternative forms of narration, including visual art and poetry, this edited collection captures multi-dimensional experiences of being fat in Canada. Together, the chapters explore the subject of fat oppression as it acts upon individuals and collectives, unpacking how fat bodies at various intersections of gender, sexuality, racialization, disability, neurodivergence, and other axes of embodiment have been understood, both historically and within contemporary Canada.
Taking a critical approach to dominant framings of fatness, particularly those linked to an "obesity epidemic," Fat Studies in Canada aims to interrogate and dismantle systemic fat oppression by (re)centering and (re)valuing fat voices and epistemologies. Ultimately, the volume introduces new ways of celebrating fatness and fat life in Northern Turtle Island.
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- Pages
- 208
- Published in
- Toronto, CA
Table of Contents
- Cover 1
- Praise for Fat Studies in Canada: (Re)Mapping the Field 2
- Half Title Page 4
- Title Page 6
- Copyright Page 7
- Dedication 8
- Contents 10
- Acknowledgments 14
- Foreword 17
- Introduction: Our Fat Liminal Grounds 24
- Structural Fat Oppression 48
- Soft Spaces 50
- “The White Man’s Burden”?: Obesity and Colonialism in the Developing North 54
- Fat Women’s Experiences and Negotiation of Fatphobia in Canada: A Systematic Review 97
- From Africa to the Diaspora, the Never-Ending Pursuit of the Standard Body 127
- to anyone who thinks i’m ugly just because i don’t look like how you think i should 146
- The Magical Thinking That Permits Anti-Fat Experts to Fight Fat Stigma While Also Fighting Fat 148
- Mappings, Methods, and Innovations 172
- Sure Footing 174
- Like the Tide 175
- The Full Spectrum of Living: Body Mapping as Affective Community 179
- Fragments on Fatness: Moments from a Digital Storytelling Archive on Trans Experiences of Weight Stigma 201
- Lies Fatphobia Told Me 210
- Coming Home to Our Bodies: (Re)framing Fatness through an Explorations of Fat Vitality 216
- Lines to Myself 240
- Fattening Popular Culture 248
- Explosive Fatness 250
- “I’d Wish to Be Tall and Slender”: L.M. Montgomery’s Anne Series and the Regulatory Role of Slimness 251
- The Lives of Laura Cadieux: Fatness and Social Class in Québec 268
- Medical Encounters 286
- Eating Scorn 288
- Weighing In: A Critical Analysis of the 2020 Obesity Canada Guidelines 289
- A Response to the 2020 Canadian Ob*sity Guidelines 307
- NoBodyIsDisposable: Acts of Care and Preservation—Reflections on Clinical Triage Protocols during COVID-19 309
- Diagnosis – Fat! 341
- PCOS: A Journey of Fatphobia in the Medical Field 352
- Behind Closed Doors: Navigating Fatphobia in the Mental Health Space 358
- Desiring Fatness 366
- Sexy Fat 368
- Punch(ing) My Paunch 369
- Butch Bellies, Queer Desires 377
- Let Us Taste 396
- Alternative Frameworks and Imaginings 400
- Fat and Mad Bodies: Out of, Under, and Beyond Control 402
- Hefty Harm-Reduction: Body Liberation and/as Anti-Violence Work 420
- The Affective State of Fat-Beingness within Debility Politics 443
- Fat Trans Bodies in Motion: Hazards of Space-Taking 467
- Please Come and Be Fat 488
- Slender Trouble: From Berlant’s Cruel Figuring of Figure to Sedgwick’s Fat Presence 492
- Fat Magic: On Fatness as a Magic Show 528
- Yummy Body Types 536
- Afterword 538
- Contributors 548