Call For Papers “Fatness and Law”

Special issue of Fat Studies: An Interdisciplinary Journal of Body Weight and Society, guest edited by Stephanie von Liebenstein

Call for abstracts due June 15, 2018

This issue will examine questions around the relationship between fatness and law (in the widest sense). It will highlight work supporting the establishment of weight as a protected class in antidiscrimination legislation and the development of legal practices acknowledging the right to be fat as a human rights issue. While the analysis of legislation to end the “obesity epidemic”, for instance, may provide valuable insights into the political workings of the legislative process, one main focus of this issue will lie on legal efforts aimed at improving the legal situation of fat people. Featuring both practical and theoretical approaches, the issue might address topics such as legal conceptions of fatness and discrimination, legal aspects of the relationships between fatness and employment, health care, children and youth, public law, education etc., laws and ordinances to fight “obesity”, but also e.g. the question why international weight-related antidiscrimination legislation has as yet produced so little litigation.

The issue invites contributions across a wide range of disciplines and methodological and theoretical approaches within fat studies. International voices discussing case law and legislation in countries other than the US are particularly welcome. Equally so are intersectional approaches and perspectives from other marginalized groups on weight-related legal struggles.

Potential topics might include, but are not limited to:

–          fat people as legal subjects/fat people in court

–          weight as a discrimination category

–          fatness and fundamental rights

–          framing “fatness” in legal discourse/in litigation/in legal theory

–          intersecting identities, fatness, and law/legal theory

–          fatness, gender, and law

–          fatness, employment, and law

–          public accommodations, fatness, and law

–          fatness, public health, and law

–          fatness, health care, and law

–          fatness and disability rights

–          fatness, bullying, and the right to education

–          fatness and various other areas of law (insurance law, criminal law, youth welfare law etc.)

–          laws/ordinances aimed at fighting “obesity” and their impacts

–          law, politics, and fatness

–          fat activism aimed at improving the legal situation of fat people

–          learning from other marginalized groups’ legal struggles

–          development of criteria for what characteristics should be protected under antidiscrimination legislation

–          fatness, law, and the limits of law

To be considered for inclusion in this special issue, please send a 250-500 word abstract and outline of your projected paper and a current CV to Stephanie von Liebenstein, fatness-law@gmx.de by June 15th, 2018. Any questions about the topic can also be directed to this e-mail.

Final submissions should be between 3000-6000 words, including all notes and references, and should be received by December 31st, 2018. If you wish to include reproductions of visual images with your paper, you will need to receive permission to do so from the artists/copyright holders of the image(s).  All authors will need to sign a form that transfers copyright of their article to the publisher, Taylor & Francis/Routledge.

Fat Studies is the first academic journal in the field of scholarship that critically examines theory, research, practices, and programs related to body weight and appearance. Content includes original research and overviews exploring the intersection of gender, race/ethnicity, sexuality, age, ability, and socioeconomic status. Articles critically examine representations of fat in health and medical sciences, the Health at Every Size model, the pharmaceutical industry, psychology, sociology, cultural studies, legal issues, literature, pedagogy, art, theater, popular culture, media studies, and activism.


Fat Studies
 is an interdisciplinary, international field of scholarship that critically examines societal attitudes and practices about body weight and appearance. Fat Studies advocates equality for all people regardless of body size. It explores the way fat people are oppressed, the reasons why, who benefits from that oppression and how to liberate fat people from oppression. Fat Studies seeks to challenge and remove the negative associations that society has about fat and the fat body. It regards weight, like height, as a human characteristic that varies widely across any population. Fat Studies is similar to academic disciplines that focus on race, ethnicity, gender, or age.

Call for Articles: Special Issue on Fat Oppression of the Fat Studies Journal will Include a Second Issue

CFP—Special Issue of Fat Studies: An Interdisciplinary Journal of Body Weight and Society on Fat Oppression Part 2, edited by Ariane Prohaska and Jeannine A. Gailey

To be considered for inclusion in part 2 of this special issue, please send a 200-250 word abstract and a current CV to Ariane Prohaska (aprohaska@ua.edu) or Jeannine Gailey (j.gailey@tcu.edu) by March 15, 2018.  Letters of invitation will be sent by April 15, 2018. Abstract acceptance does not guarantee your manuscript will be accepted; all manuscripts will undergo a refereed peer review process. Any questions about the topic can also be directed to us via e-mail.

This special issue of Fat Studies: An Interdisciplinary Journal of Body Weight and Society explores issues around fat oppression. The editors invite papers on a variety of topics that address, for example, fatness as a dimension of inequality (e.g. discrimination in jobs, education, and public spaces) that intersects with other inequalities (race, class, gender, ability, sexuality, etc.), the theorizing of fat/fatness or “obesity” as deviant and the consequences on the physical/mental health of fat people, and violence against fat people.

Potential topics might include, but are not limited to:

  • Stereotypes of fat people and their consequences
  • Fat children: bullying, stigma, and outcomes
  • Intimate partner violence and fat bodies
  • Fat oppression in medicine/pharmaceutical industry
  • Sexual assault/rape of fat bodies
  • Media representations of fat people
  • The history of fat oppression
  • Public policy and fat bodies
  • The diet industry and fat bodies
  • Fat activism
  • Resilience in the face of fat oppression

 

Final submissions should be between 3000-6000 words, including all notes and references, and should be received by July 15th, 2018. If you wish to include reproductions of visual images with your essay, you will need to receive permission to do so from the artists/copyright holders of the image(s).  All authors will need to sign a form that transfers copyright of their article to the publisher, Taylor & Francis/Routledge.

Fat Studies is the first academic journal in the field of scholarship that critically examines theory, research, practices, and programs related to body weight and appearance. Content includes original research and overviews exploring the intersection of gender, race/ethnicity, sexuality, age, ability, and socioeconomic status. Articles critically examine representations of fat in health and medical sciences, the Health at Every Size model, the pharmaceutical industry, psychology, sociology, cultural studies, legal issues, literature, pedagogy, art, theater, popular culture, media studies, and activism.


Fat Studies
 is an interdisciplinary, international field of scholarship that critically examines societal attitudes and practices about body weight and appearance. Fat Studies advocates equality for all people regardless of body size. It explores the way fat people are oppressed, the reasons why, who benefits from that oppression and how to liberate fat people from oppression. Fat Studies seeks to challenge and remove the negative associations that society has about fat and the fat body. It regards weight, like height, as a human characteristic that varies widely across any population. Fat Studies is similar to academic disciplines that focus on race, ethnicity, gender, or age.

Call For Papers – Special Issue of Fat Studies: An Interdisciplinary Journal of Body Weight and Society on Fat Oppression

Special Issue of Fat Studies: An Interdisciplinary Journal of Body Weight and Society on Fat Oppression, edited by Ariane Prohaska and Jeannine A. Gailey

To be considered for inclusion in this special issue, please send a 200-250 word abstract and a current CV to Ariane Prohaska (aprohaska@ua.edu) or Jeannine Gailey (j.gailey@tcu.edu) by December 15th, 2017.  Any questions about the topic can also be directed to these e-mails.

This special issue of Fat Studies: An Interdisciplinary Journal of Body Weight and Society explores issues around fat oppression. The editors invite papers on a variety of topics that address, for example, fatness as a dimension of inequality (e.g. discrimination in jobs, education, and public spaces) that intersects with other inequalities (race, class, gender, ability, sexuality, etc.), the theorizing of fat/fatness or “obesity” as deviant and the consequences on the physical/mental health of fat people, and violence against fat people.

Potential topics might include, but are not limited to:

  • Stereotypes of fat people and their consequences
  • Fat children: bullying, stigma, and outcomes
  • Intimate partner violence and fat bodies
  • Fat oppression in medicine/pharmaceutical industry
  • Sexual assault/rape of fat bodies
  • Media representations of fat people
  • The history of fat oppression
  • Public policy and fat bodies
  • The diet industry and fat bodies
  • Fat activism
  • Resilience in the face of fat oppression

Final submissions should be between 3000-6000 words, including all notes and references, and should be received by April 1, 2018. If you wish to include reproductions of visual images with your essay, you will need to receive permission to do so from the artists/copyright holders of the image(s).  All authors will need to sign a form that transfers copyright of their article to the publisher, Taylor & Francis/Routledge.

Fat Studies is the first academic journal in the field of scholarship that critically examines theory, research, practices, and programs related to body weight and appearance. Content includes original research and overviews exploring the intersection of gender, race/ethnicity, sexuality, age, ability, and socioeconomic status. Articles critically examine representations of fat in health and medical sciences, the Health at Every Size model, the pharmaceutical industry, psychology, sociology, cultural studies, legal issues, literature, pedagogy, art, theater, popular culture, media studies, and activism.


Fat Studies
 is an interdisciplinary, international field of scholarship that critically examines societal attitudes and practices about body weight and appearance. Fat Studies advocates equality for all people regardless of body size. It explores the way fat people are oppressed, the reasons why, who benefits from that oppression and how to liberate fat people from oppression. Fat Studies seeks to challenge and remove the negative associations that society has about fat and the fat body. It regards weight, like height, as a human characteristic that varies widely across any population. Fat Studies is similar to academic disciplines that focus on race, ethnicity, gender, or age.

See The Fattitude Movie Premiere in New York and California!

 

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Have you been waiting to see Fattitude the Movie?!?

Tickets are available NOW for NY and CA Premieres!

Brooklyn, NY Premiere

BEDA Fattitude Premiere

Sponsored by and benefiting BEDA (Binge Eating Disorder Association)

Brooklyn, NY – November 02, 2017 – 7:30 PM – 9:30 PM – $30 per person

United Artists Court Street 12 & RPX, 106 Court Street, Brooklyn, NY 11201

 

Buy Tickets for Brooklyn Screening

Los Angeles Premiere

 

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Screening at the LA Femme International Film Festival

Los Angeles, CA – October 21, 2017 – 4:00 PM – 6:00 PM – $10 per person
1000 W Olympic Blvd., Lose Angeles, CA 90015

 

Buy Tickets for LA Screening

 

Fearless Fatshion Review: Society Plus Anne Lace Skirt

Society+ Size TagSAVINGS!

** Society+ just launched a skirt sale and is offering Fattitude fans  an exclusive code for an additional 10% off!

Code: fatittude10skirt

https://society-plus.com/collections/25-off-skirt-sale

 

 

Fattitude Communications and Social Media Diva, Melissa Mazza, had the delight of trying on and sharing with Fattitude fans, the Society+ Anne Lace skirt in White.

Launched in 2015, Society+ is a plus size e-commerce Society+ Logoretailer and lifestyle brand focused on body positivity and plus size fashion!  Society+ shows diverse models, offers up to size 32/5X and all items are true to size – an all-around unapologetic, cutting-edge brand we adore!

Melissa:
First of all – I love this brand and the movement it embodies, and it’s an honor to be able to blog about this piece from Society+!  Their website is chock full of fresh fatshion inspiration from some of your fav bloggers, and diverse models from around the world – because representation matters!  I can’t express how much I love being able to see, before buying, what a piece looks like on a body shape/size similar to mine!

The piece I received is the white Anne Lace skirt. It’s a high-quality, 2-layer pencil skirt with zippered back and thick elastic waistband.  I was a little worried about the length, since I’m only 5’1″, but hiking the waistband up higher on my body gave me the perfect length I was looking for.  The skirt is comfortable, has the perfect amount of stretch, easy to dress up or down, and the delicate lacy details are so classy! I dressed-up and dressed-down the piece, so you can see how versatile this skirt is.

Society+ Anne Lace Skirt with Black Top To dress-up, I paired the skirt with a black mesh cape top, patent leather pumps and a chunky necklace.  I would totally wear this on a date or out for drinks with my girlfriends!

Society+ Anne Lace Skirt

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

For a more casual look, I simply paired the skirt with a grey tank, denim jacket and some comfy athletic flats.  A totally easy to pull together look that is cute and comfortable!

Society+ Anne Lace Skirt

Melissa in Society+ Anne Lace

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Dressed up or down, I am loving my new skirt!  I can’t wait to share more items with you all in the future!

XO Melissa

 

*This blog post is the opinion of a particular Fattitude intern – and does not necessarily reflect the position of Fattitude, Inc.

Talking Body Love, Media Sizism and Weirdos With Jen Ponton!

We had the great pleasure of chatting and giggling with the very lovely and multi-talented actress and body love activist, Jen Ponton.  Jen is most commonly recognized for her work on “30 Rock”, “Orange is the New Black” and “The Unbreakable Kimmy Schmidt” – and hopefully many more leading roles in the near future!

Jen found her love and refuge in school plays and dance as a young girl, and received such joy in making people laugh.  After attaining her theatre degree, she transitioned to TV with the desire to tell bigger stories that could impact more people.  In finding the body love and fat acceptance communities, Jen says she found the most wonderful, dynamic, justice-seeking, compassionate, badass people she’s ever known – and we think she is all of those things and more!

Here’s the inside scoop from our conversation with Jen Ponton! Make sure to support her on Facebook and Twitter, and be sure to check out her adorable series, “The Weirdos Next Door.

When and how did you find body positivity and fat acceptance?

My fat acceptance & body love journey started when I was in my mid 20s. I was maybe 23 or 24.  I had spent all my life up to that point being where most fat people find themselves – self-loathing, feeling undeserving of love, constantly dieting, starving myself, abusing my body- it was bad news bears. My first step, honestly, was meeting and then dating my now-husband, who is also fat and comes from a family of size (I am from a family of very thin WASPs).  Early conversations with him were really illuminating, and gently encouraged me to love my body.  It was the first time I’d ever heard that. It helped – and it even took me out of the cycle of dieting and eased my food issues.

During that time, I was primed to find the blog circle called the Fat-O-Sphere.  It included blogs helmed by (mostly) women who are now prolific writers – Kate Harding, Marianne Kirby, Lesley Kinzel, Melissa McEwan of Shakesville.  I was fascinated and so ready; I read their archives for months and months, and there I learned about fat acceptance, health at every size, and the insidious diet industry’s influence in funding research that points to fat equaling morbidity.  It molded me into a new person who really owned myself and truly loved my body, ate intuitively, and moved my body because joy not because getting skinny.

Has acting strengthened your own love and acceptance of your body?

It didn’t used to – it used make it glaringly clear to me that I wasn’t like everyone else and that something was wrong with me.  My costumes were often frumpy and unbecoming, while all the other actresses (many of whom were very slim) played romantic leads and got to look adorable and lovely.  I found this to be true especially in musical theatre. Being a fat actor is a weird fun-house mirror, because you LIVE inside the sizist media skew that we’re all subject to.  For us it isn’t just a magazine or a movie, it’s literally our entire demographic and world.  In the years since I started pursuing television and film, the paradigm shifted.  I started relishing the opportunity to play fat characters, because I could really humanize them and connect in a real way. In addition, I loved getting cast in non-size-specific roles – it allowed me to say, “Great, this is a normal person. Her size has nothing to do with this script.”  From there, it was just being a person, showing someone’s humanity – even if she happened to be a size 22.  I find that getting to be a visible representative of our community is a gift that I love to give, but also one that comes right back to me in spades and enhances my own body positivity.

What is the most body positive role you’ve had opportunity to play and why?

This season, I did a guest star on my beloved Hulu show, Deadbeat – and I got to play the most delicious character ever!  She was an English Duchess who died while her nude portrait was being done, and since I played her ghost, the entire episode is ‘TV Naked’ (i.e. pasties and nude shorts with censor bars and a CGI navel – movie magic!). Duchess Beatrix was also a total freak-a-leek, so all she does for the entire episode is hit on Pac (Tyler Labine) with the creepiest, raunchiest come-ons that may have ever escaped my lips.  She is hot and KNOWS she’s hot, and while Pac is turned off by her, it’s more because she’s a creep than because of her body.  What he lacks in interest, Clyde (Kal Penn) makes up for – he sees her painting and talks about what a babe she is.  It’s such a great depiction of a confident and sexy fat woman who sees what she wants and goes right for it.

Is it harder to be a plus size actress?

I really don’t think so.  I think it’s enormously difficult to be a fat actress who doesn’t love her body and is uncomfortable in her own skin; that base level of self-loathing with a scoop of feeling disenfranchised on top of it is just a recipe for misery.  I think if you ARE confident in your body and truly have a healthy relationship with yourself, being a fat actress can be much easier.  We’re still a distant minority in this business, and television and film are really starting to come around and tell stories about people who look like us. The best is yet to come, for sure.

Do you think plus size representation is important to the body positive movement?

ABSOLUTELY.  We normalize what we see every day. (As Hannibal Lecter says, “We covet what we see every day.”)  Part of feeling so icky and alien in our bodies is because nothing we take in reflects fat people in a human way – period.  What little we DO see of fat people in print and entertainment is meant as a punchline or a sad sack or someone’s pitiful ‘before’ photo.  How are we supposed to feed that to our subconscious for a lifetime and take anything good away from it?  To change the game for fat people, we MUST be represented in humane ways across the board. We must see our pictures, our characters, our stories everywhere, and it’s vitally important that they be featured in a way that doesn’t have our happiness, success or sense of worthiness be contingent upon changing our bodies.

What’s next for you professionally? What can we expect to see you in?

I’ve got a lot of stuff on Netflix that premiered this year, so if you haven’t yet binge-watched this season of “Unbreakable Kimmy Schmidt”, “Orange is the New Black”, or Hulu’s “Deadbeat” – you’ll find me there! Also, a film in which I star, “Love on the Run”, recently released and is available on Amazon and iTunes. As for what’s next, I’m tackling sizism in content creation, too – writing a couple of awesome scripts with badass, sexy fat characters.  Why wait for everyone else to wake up? I’m excited to get these stories out there to lead the way!

jenpontonweirdos

#TBINAA Rocks, You Should Subscribe

If you don’t know of The Body is Not an Apology or #TBINAA for short – it’s time to take a look. TBNIAA, the brainchild of Sonya Renee Taylor – a fattitude interviewee and all-around radical badass – is an online community dedicated to Radical Self-Love. Read More

Call for Papers: Visual Fat Studies

Attention Fattitude Fans: Call for Papers – Visual Fat Studies

FKW // Zeitschrift für Geschlechterforschung und visuelle Kultur

No. 62, Spring 2017, Submission deadline: October 20, 2016

In 2030, almost half of all Europeans will be fat — according to the striking yet simplistic forecast issued by the WHO at the 2015 European Congress on Obesity in Prague. For some time, the message has spread in the Global North that obesity, adiposity, overweight, etc. threaten to deform the healthy (i.e., slim) nation’s body like a contagious virus. Read More

Fattitude’s Viri needs Your Help…

About 7 years ago I got my hands on a road bike thanks to a friend who introduced me to this wondrous vessel as the best way to see the world. I had just gotten to Florida to start grad school and riding up and down the coast became my escape, my inspiration and my training grounds to admire what my body was capable of. I’ve always had a bigger body on my bike then the Tour de Francer’s whizzing by, but that didn’t take anything away from my riding experience. I still reach break spots to say hi and I still complete my 30, 40, 60 and more, mile goals. Read More

Body Wars

“The danger of falling into the habit of demanding that our bodies-fat bodies, or otherwise “ugly” bodies-be pretty too is that by doing so we are reinforcing the cultural importance of prettiness.  We are acknowledging a longing for social acceptance, a willingness to indulge prettiness pressures so long as we are allowed to play too.  It is a classically liberal stance: all we want is our fair share. I’d prefer to occupy a space outside the pretty/ugly paradigm, a space where the parameters are self-determined.”

Lesley Kinzel, Two Whole Cakes: How to Stop Dieting and Learn to Love Your Body

Sometime before my double digit birthday, my mom fell ill.  Limbs swollen and the skin on her legs so taut, I worried that a mere pinprick might deflate my mom. It was the mid-nineties and there was very little information about this mysterious illness.  Read More