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A poignant and ruthlessly honest journey through cultural
expectations of size, race, and gender--and toward a brighter
future--from National Book Award nominee Evette Dionne My body has
not betrayed me; it has continued rebounding against all odds. It
is a body that others map their expectations on, but it has never
let me down. In this insightful, funny, and whip-smart book,
acclaimed writer Evette Dionne explores the minefields fat Black
woman are forced to navigate in the course of everyday life. From
her early experiences of harassment to adolescent self-discovery in
internet chatrooms to diagnosis with heart failure at age
twenty-nine, Dionne tracks her relationships with friendship, sex,
motherhood, agoraphobia, health, pop culture, and self-image. Along
the way, she lifts back the curtain to reveal the subtle, insidious
forms of surveillance and control levied at fat women: At the
doctor's office, where any health ailment is treated with a
directive to lose weight. On dating sites, where larger bodies are
rejected or fetishized. On TV, where fat characters are asexual
comedic relief. But Dionne's unflinching account of our deeply held
prejudices is matched by her fierce belief in the power of
self-love. An unmissable portrait of a woman on a journey toward
understanding our society and herself, Weightless holds up a mirror
to the world we live in and asks us to imagine the future we
deserve.
Susan B. Anthony. Elizabeth Cady Stanton. Alice Paul. The Women's
Rights Convention at Seneca Falls. The 1913 Women's March in D.C.
When the epic story of the suffrage movement in the United States
is told, the most familiar leaders, speakers at meetings, and
participants in marches written about or pictured are generally
white. The real story isn't monochromatic. Women of colour,
especially African American women, were fighting for their right to
vote and to be treated as full, equal citizens of the United
States. Their battlefront wasn't just about gender. African
American women had to deal with white abolitionist-suffragists who
drew the line at sharing power with their black sisters. They had
to overcome deep, exclusionary racial prejudices that were rife in
the American suffrage movement. And they had to maintain their
dignity - and safety - in a society that tried to keep them in its
bottom ranks. Lifting as We Climb is the empowering story of
African American women who refused to accept all this. Women in
black church groups, black female sororities, black women's
improvement societies and social clubs. Women who formed their own
black suffrage associations when white-dominated national suffrage
groups rejected them. Women like Mary Church Terrell, a founder of
the National Association of Coloured Women and of the NAACP; or
educator-activist Anna Julia Cooper who championed women getting
the vote and a college education; or the crusading journalist Ida
B. Wells, a leader in both the suffrage and anti-lynching
movements. Author Evette Dionne, a feminist culture writer and the
editor-in-chief of Bitch Media, has uncovered an extraordinary and
underrepresented history of black women. In her powerful book, she
draws an important historical line from abolition to suffrage to
civil rights to contemporary young activists - filling in the
blanks of the American suffrage story.
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