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Frontmatter
Contents
Foreword
Acknowledgments
Introduction
Part I. What Is Fat Studies? The Social and Historical Construction of Fatness
1. The Inner Corset
2. Fattening Queer History
Part II. Fat Studies in Health and Medicine
3. Does Social Class Explain the Connection Between Weight and Health?
4. Is "Permanent Weight Loss" an Oxymoron?
5. What Is "Health at Every Size"?
6. Widening the Dialogue to Narrow the Gap in Health Disparities
7. Quest for a Cause
8. Prescription for Harm
9. Public Fat
10. That Remains to Be Said Disappeared Feminist Discourses on Fat in Dietetic Theory and Practice
11. Fatness (In)visible
Part III. Fatness as Social Inequality
12. Fat Kids, Working Moms, and the "Epidemic of Obesity"
13. Fat Youth as Common Targets for Bullying
14. Bon Bon Fatty Girl
15. Part-Time Fatso
16. Double Stigma: Fat Men and Their Male Admirers
17. The Shape of Abuse
18. Fat Women as "Easy Targets"
19. No Apology
20. Access to the Sky
21. Neoliberalism and the Constitution of Contemporary Bodies
22. Sitting Pretty
23. Stigma Threat and the Fat Professor
24. Fat Stories in the Classroom
Part IV. Size-ism in Popular Culture and Literature
25. Fat Girls and Size Queens
26. Fat Girls Need Fiction
27. Fat Heroines in Chick-Lit
28. The Fat of the (Border)land
29. Placing Fat Women on Center Stage
30. "The White Man's Burden"
31. The Roseanne Benedict Arnolds
32. Jiggle in My Walk
33. Seeing Through the Layers
34. Controlling the Body
35. "I'm Allowed to Be a Sexual Being"
36. Embodying Fat Liberation
37. Not Jane Fonda
38. Exorcising the Exercise Myth
Part VI. Starting the Revolution
39. Maybe It Should Be Called Fat American Studies
40. Are We Ready to Throw Our Weight Around? Fat Studies and Political Activism
Appendix A
About the Contributors
Index

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