CEU Electronic Theses and Dissertations, 2021
Author | Espinoza Guerrero, Lorena Dariana |
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Title | Fat Terrorist Bodies |
Summary | Fat, as a socially imposed adjective, contains a myriad of preconceptions and prejudices that have allowed engagements with fat bodies to be problematic at best, violent at worse. Fat bodies, through the construction of the obesity epidemic and the war against fat, have been transformed into dangerous bodies that generate and experience fear. My own experience as a fat woman whose body has been medicalized has prompted me to question what is it that makes our bodies dangerous. The process of the medicalization of fatness is intrinsically linked to biopower structures that seek to regulate the body through biomedical discourse. The perpetuation of a weight/health paradigm, along with discourses that frame fatness as a direct result of individual choices and therefore as cureable, has given way to regulatory mechanisms that stigmatize and discriminate against fat bodies. Gordofatphobia, the term I use to describe said processes of stigmatization, has framed fat bodies as dangerous bodies that defiantly challenge the normalizing regulations imposed by society. Fat bodies hence become a source of fear, our refusal to conform to the norm turning us into fat terrorist bodies. For this reason, fat people, and people in general, choose to engage with what I term fatnormativity (gordonormatividad in Spanish) – behaviors and actions geared towards eliminating fatness from the body. The experience of inhabiting fat bodies that generate fear is not culturally or geographically bound; the stigmatization of fatness speaks to a transnational phenomenon deeply rooted in imperial and colonial discourses of power and body regulation. Through autoethnography and my proposed revolting methodology, I engage in a queer decolonial practice that seeks to destabilize traditional narratives of fatness. In doing so, I offer fear and terror as potential fields for action. |
Supervisor | Jones-Gailani, Nadia; Sánchez Espinosa, Adelina. |
Department | Gender Studies MA |
Full text | https://www.etd.ceu.edu/2021/espinoza_lorena.pdf |
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