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Fat¿A Fate Worse Than Death?: Women, Weight, and Appearance
 
 

Fat¿A Fate Worse Than Death?: Women, Weight, and Appearance [Hardcover]

Ellen Cole , Esther D Rothblum , Ruth R Thone
2.5 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (4 customer reviews)
List Price: CDN$ 69.28
Price: CDN$ 58.98 & this item ships for FREE with Super Saver Shipping. Details
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Book Description

Despite the gains of the women’s movement, women are still judged by what they look like--and men, by what they do. Fat--A Fate Worse Than Death? offers hardy resistance to the narrow, random, and irrational appearance standards set for American women through an approach that is personal, eclectic, courageous, and funny. If you are interested in giving up your diet, throwing out your scales, and concentrating on who you are on a deeper level, this book will show you how to accept, appreciate, and even love your body!

Using statistics, research, anecdotes, and personal experiences, Fat--A Fate Worse Than Death? explores how appearance standards have built a prison for women. With the book’s helpful advice, reading suggestions, and list of more than 100 ways to fight looksism, sexism, ageism, and racism, you will learn to express your rights and needs, regardless of your shape or size, and tear down those prison walls. Designed to transcend the boundaries between the personal and the political, Fat--A Fate Worse Than Death? discusses:
  • examples of how weight and size constitute the last socially accepted prejudice
  • the national “War on Fat”
  • counteracting societal influences that support weight preoccupation
  • connection between appearance standards for older women and large women
  • nurturing your body
  • resisting male-defined standards of beauty for women
  • the myth of diets and dieting
  • how the body resists weight loss
  • how women are disempowered by concentration on weight and appearance
  • how concentrating on appearance leaves real-life issues unaddressed
  • how feeling bad about yourself can turn you into a willing consumer

    Feminists, faculty and students of women’s studies programs, aging women, women of radical politics, and other concerned women and men will find that Fat--A Fate Worse Than Death? states explicitly how women are kept powerless by subscribing to cultural and social edicts on physical appearance. Don’t live silently in a society that degrades and discounts women because of their physical stature and don‘t let obsession with thinness keep you passive, docile, and unable to give your energy to things that really need your passion and intelligence. Read this book and learn to not only value yourself for who you are, but also to counteract American culture’s equality-denying prejudices and practices.

Inside This Book (Learn More)
First Sentence
What is the worst thing someone ever said to you about your appearance or size? Read the first page
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Concordance
Browse Sample Pages
Front Cover | Copyright | Table of Contents | Excerpt | Index | Back Cover
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Customer Reviews

4 Reviews
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Average Customer Review
2.5 out of 5 stars (4 customer reviews)
 
 
 
 
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3.0 out of 5 stars Not fabulous & uplifting but worth the effort, Mar 7 2000
By 
Alison (Sydney, Australia) - See all my reviews
This was the first book on size issues that I found when I began reading books on the subject. Whilst I have read several other works that seemed more relevant to me as a 25yr old fat woman I am glad I read this. I think it is important to see the issue from its many angles. No point of view is less valid than your own- and this is what is most important when approaching this work. If I was an older woman perhaps this would have been more relevant but as a lipstick loving twenty-something fat chick who has come to terms with my size and what it means in the society that I live in this book was socially interesting but not personally relevant. Another quick observation was that it is very bleak in its outlook. This is not the book if you're looking for something uplifting. If you're looking to have a good selection of size issue books on your shelf than buy this. If you're just looking for one book than try Fat!So? by Marilyn Wann.
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4.0 out of 5 stars Not for people who don't want to listen, Feb 25 2000
By 
Brian (Boston, MA) - See all my reviews
I have read a number of books on the subject of fat oppression, and this is easily one of the most valuable experiences. The author intelligently and deliberately lays out the problem of weight-based oppression, and offers a coherent response. If you are resistant to the notion that it can be okay to be fat, you won't like this book. It challenges those prejudices with no apology. The looks-based oppression of women has been given a supposed validity under the guise of health, but Thorne works to show the absurdity of such claims. It is possible to be fat and happy and healthy, but there is much standing in the way. She doesn't pull her punches, and that is bound to put off some resistant minds. So often we see pundants decry to oppression while refusing to challenge the foundation and justification for the bigotry and prejudice. You won't see that here. Admittedly, the book moves at a somewhat uninspired pace and does not make for a good introduction to the problem of fat prejudices. If it is a topic of interest for you, however, I'm sure you will find this to be an interesting read.
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2.0 out of 5 stars Honest, but repetitive and long-winded, Jun 29 1999
By A Customer
While I did appreciate the author's honesty and self-explorative approach to this book, I agree with the previous reviewer that this book went on way too long. The author actually presents the same anecdotes in different chapters and struggles with the same questions again and agin throughout the text, with little movement forward. Funny that the last section is entitled "Time to Move On." because she doesn't seem to do that very well. Unlike the previous reviewer, I don't recall anything in the book that indicated that the author's weight is contributing to health problems; in fact, my recollection is that she was able to ameliorate a number of health problems through healthy eating and exercise without any weight loss. My sense was that she was attempting to demonstrate that we talk about weight loss as a health necessity, when it is more often a culturally mandated appearance issue. My favorite line in the whole book was a quote from columnist Ellen Goodman: "Show me a woman who only wants to be thin for her health and I'll show you a man who buys Playboy just to read the interview."
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