Lizzo's Black, female, and fat resistance / Niya Pickett Miller, Gheni N. Platenburg.
2021
BF697.5.B63
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Title
Lizzo's Black, female, and fat resistance / Niya Pickett Miller, Gheni N. Platenburg.
ISBN
9783030737627 (electronic bk.)
3030737624 (electronic bk.)
3030737616
9783030737610
3030737624 (electronic bk.)
3030737616
9783030737610
Published
Cham, Switzerland : Palgrave Macmillan, [2021]
Language
English
Description
1 online resource (vi, 72 pages) : illustration
Item Number
10.1007/978-3-030-73762-7 doi
Call Number
BF697.5.B63
Dewey Decimal Classification
306.4/613
Summary
Celebrated musician and entertainer Lizzo wowed audiences and left many "feeling good as hell." Notwithstanding her collective--fat, Black female--identity she catapulted into mainstream success while redefining the social script for body size, race, and gender. This book explores a tale of two narratives: Lizzo's self-curated, fat-positive identity and the media's reaction to an unabashedly proud fat, Black woman. This critical analysis examines how Lizzo challenges fatphobia and reconstitutes fat stigmatization into self-empowerment through her strategic use of hyper-embodiment via social media, and the rhetorical distinctions between Lizzo's self-curated narrative via social media and those offered about her in print media. In part, Lizzo's bodily flaunting is argued as a significant rhetorical act that emancipates her identity of fatness and reframes the negative tropes of (fat) Black women typically curated in American culture. Niya Pickett Miller, Ph. D., is a public speaker and post-doctoral Assistant Professor of Communication Studies in the Department of Communication and Media at Samford University, USA. Her forthcoming edited book (2021) titled, #Verzuz and Club Quarantine: Sustaining Black Music and Black Culture During COVID-19 features curated studies of Black cultural expression and communication through live streamed music on Instagram during the COVID-19 pandemic. Her 2020 book, Deconstructing Albinism as the Other, explores the visual tropes of people with albinism in American popular culture. Gheni N. Platenburg, Ph. D., is an Assistant Professor in the School of Communication and Journalism at Auburn University, USA, where she teaches multimedia journalism courses. Her research interests primarily fall at the intersection of race and media. Her co-authored research has been published in the peer-reviewed Journal of Black Studies. Currently, she works as a freelance journalist for The Washington Post Talent Network
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Includes bibliographical references and index.
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Source of Description
Online resource; title from PDF title page (SpringerLink, viewed May 13, 2021).
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Series
Palgrave studies in (re)presenting gender, 2662-9364
Available in Other Form
Print version: 9783030737610
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Table of Contents
Introduction
Fat Black Female Flaunting
So what, it's Lizzo?
Fat Black Female Flaunting
So what, it's Lizzo?