Book Description
The Embodiment of Disobedience explores the ways in which the African Diaspora has rejected the West's efforts to impose imperatives of slenderness and mass market fat-anxiety.
Author : Andrea Elizabeth Shaw
Publisher : Lexington Books
Page : 166 pages
File Size : 20,28 MB
Release : 2006
Category : History
ISBN : 9780739114872
The Embodiment of Disobedience explores the ways in which the African Diaspora has rejected the West's efforts to impose imperatives of slenderness and mass market fat-anxiety.
Author : Hillary L. McBride
Publisher : Routledge
Page : 595 pages
File Size : 23,11 MB
Release : 2018-07-18
Category : Psychology
ISBN : 1351660160
This is an insightful and essential new volume for academics and professionals interested in the lived experience of those who struggle with disordered eating. Embodiment and Eating Disorders situates the complicated – and increasingly prevalent – topic of disordered eating at the crossroads of many academic disciplines, articulating a notion of embodied selfhood that rejects the separation of mind and body and calls for a feminist, existential, and sociopolitically aware approach to eating disorder treatment. Experts from a variety of backgrounds and specializations examine theories of embodiment, current empirical research, and practical examples and strategies for prevention and treatment.
Author : Melissa Zimdars
Publisher : Rutgers University Press
Page : 201 pages
File Size : 29,94 MB
Release : 2019-02-07
Category : Health & Fitness
ISBN : 0813593549
Watching Our Weights explores the competing and contradictory fat representations on television that are related to weight-loss and health, medicalization and disease, and body positivity and fat acceptance. Melissa Zimdars establishes how television shapes our knowledge of fatness and how fatness helps us better understand contemporary television.
Author : J. Mobley
Publisher : Springer
Page : 213 pages
File Size : 11,76 MB
Release : 2014-09-04
Category : Social Science
ISBN : 1137428945
The fat female body is a unique construction in American culture that has been understood in various ways during the twentieth and early twenty-first centuries. Analyzing post-WWII stage and screen performances, Mobley argues that the fat actress's body signals myriad cultural assumptions and suggests new ways of reading the body in performance.
Author : Alice Randall
Publisher : Houghton Mifflin Harcourt
Page : 228 pages
File Size : 21,3 MB
Release : 2001
Category : Fiction
ISBN : 9780618219063
A parody of Gone with the wind, this novel tells the story of Cynara, the mulatto half-sister born into slavery who eventually triumphs.
Author : Edgar Johnson Goodspeed
Publisher :
Page : 504 pages
File Size : 44,90 MB
Release : 1923
Category : Bible
ISBN :
Author : Anthony J. Lemelle, Jr.
Publisher : Routledge
Page : 302 pages
File Size : 29,68 MB
Release : 2010-04-26
Category : Social Science
ISBN : 1135192170
This book is about how African American males experience masculinity politics, and how U.S. sexism and racial ranking influences relationships between black and white males. Lemelle argues that the only way to accommodate African American males is to eliminate sexism, particularly as it appears in the organization of families.
Author : Andrea Shaw Nevins
Publisher : University of Georgia Press
Page : 183 pages
File Size : 47,85 MB
Release : 2019-11-15
Category : Social Science
ISBN : 0820356107
Working Juju examines how fantastical and unreal modes are deployed in portrayals of the Caribbean in popular and literary culture as well as in the visual arts. The Caribbean has historically been constructed as a region mantled by the fantastic. Andrea Shaw Nevins analyzes such imaginings of the Caribbean and interrogates the freighting of Caribbean-infused spaces with characteristics that register as fantastical. These fantastical traits may be described as magical, supernatural, uncanny, paranormal, mystical, and speculative. The book asks throughout, What are the discursive threads that run through texts featuring the Caribbean fantastic? In Working Juju, Nevins teases out the multilayered and often obscured connections among texts such as the Pirates of the Caribbean film series, planter and historian Edward Long’s History of Jamaica, and Grenadian sci-fi writer Tobias Buckell’s Xenowealth series set in the future Caribbean. Fantastical representations of the region generally occupy one of two spaces. In the first, the Caribbean fantastic facilitates an imagining of the colonial experience and its aftermath as one in which the region and its representatives exercise agency and in which the humanity of the region’s inhabitants is asserted. Alternately, the fantastic is sometimes situated as a signifier of the irrational and uncivilized. The thread that unites portrayals of the fantastic Caribbean in the latter kind of works is that they tend to locate Caribbean belief systems as powerful, even at times inadvertently in contradiction to the text’s ideological posture. Nevins shows how the singular “Caribbean” identity that emerges in these text is at odds with the complex historical narratives of actual Caribbean countries and colonies.
Author : Harold Bloom
Publisher : Infobase Publishing
Page : 291 pages
File Size : 20,43 MB
Release : 2010
Category : Civil disobedience in literature
ISBN : 1604134399
Provides an examination of the use of civil disobedience in classic literary works.
Author : Vicki Callahan
Publisher : Wayne State University Press
Page : 470 pages
File Size : 18,15 MB
Release : 2010-04-15
Category : Performing Arts
ISBN : 0814336876
Scholars of film history and feminist studies will appreciate the breadth of work in this volume.