Sonya Renee Taylor is an international award-winning writer and performer, published author, and founder and Radical Executive Ofcer of The Body is Not An Apology, an international digital media and education company committed to radical self-love and body empowerment as the foundational tool of social justice. Cat Pausé is Fat Studies scholar at the Institute of Education, Massey University, New Zealand, and the co-editor of Queering Fat Embodiment. Presenting work from both scholarly writers and activists, this volume refects a range of critical perspectives vital to the expansion of Fat Studies and thus constitutes an essential resource for researchers in the feld. The frst major collection of its kind, it explores the epistemology, ontology, and methodology of fatness, with attention to issues such as gender and sexuality, disability and embodiment, health, race, media, discrimination, and pedagogy. The Routledge International Handbook of Fat Studies brings together a diverse body of work from around the globe and across a wide range of Fat Studies topics and perspectives. THE ROUTLEDGE INTERNATIONAL HANDBOOK OF FAT STUDIES 3 Quantifying or contributing to antifat attitudes?ĥ My life is intersectional, so my coaching has to be: Here is why this is a good thingħ Big, fat, Greek modernities: On fatness, Western imperatives and modern Greek cultureĨ Does that mean my body must always be a source of pain? Sexual violence, trauma and agency in Argentinian fat activist spacesĩ Fatness and consequences of neoliberalismġ0 Fat and trans: Towards a new theorization of gender in Fat Studiesġ1 Fatness and disability: Law, identity, co-constructions, and future directionsġ3 Being fat in a thin world: The politics of fashionġ4 Fattening education: An invitation to the nascent field of fat pedagogyġ5 Fatness, discrimination and law: An international perspectiveġ6 Pregnancy, parenting and the challenge of fatnessġ8 Reclaiming voices from stigma: Fat autoethnography as a consciously political actġ9 Save the whales: An examination of the relationship between academics/professionals and fat activistsĢ0 Fat hatred and body respect: The curious case of IcelandĢ1 Desirability as access: Navigating life at the intersection of fat, Black, dark and femaleĢ2 The impact of being a fat Chinese woman in Hong KongĢ5 Genealogies of excess: Towards a decolonial Fat StudiesĢ6 When you are already dead: Black fat being as afrofuturismĢ9 What’s queer about Fat Studies now? A critical exploration of queer/ing fatness
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