this week has been one where you can't blog fast enough about something. it seems like the second i read the news about beth ditto's recent problematic spread in nylon magazine, five other posts popped up on my reader about it. namely, check out the smart and thoughtful responses from tara at fatshionista.com and the fierce ladies at threadbared (which is also cross-posted over at racialicious, one of my favorite reads!). both of these pieces are super insightful and exciting for the fact that they are so complete in their analyses. read them and love them!
the only 2cents i want to add is oh how i wish this photoshoot had come about a month sooner! don't get me wrong, i wish it didn't exist period, but if it's going to, the least we can do is use it as a teaching tool and that i find exciting amidst the harm a photo like this does.
i'm thinking about june of this year when i went to an academic conference for an area of study whose evolution over the past thirty or so years has been so dedicated to thinking intersectionally about issues like gender, race, and class, along with the much-needed additional analyses of other identifiers like dis/ability and size. and yet, at a meeting aimed specifically at making space for fat studies within future conferences and the discipline as a whole, conversations about fat inclusion were "justified" by claims that "being fat is the last acceptable oppression." i was so stunned by this response that i couldn't control my body's reaction to shake my head "no" rapidly and uncontrollably despite what i'm sure many assumed to be quite rude. this position is so offensive and so privileged, yet surprisingly rampant amongst a number of straight, white, fat folks.
and so then here's beth ditto! someone who is white, but who grew up poor and has working class roots, is fat (publicly and on-stage!), and is queer and partnered with a masculine-identified, female-bodied person (i'm not sure how freddie fagula identifies, so...). and despite all of this, a photo like this exists that just so "brilliantly" makes clear that we are so far from any kind of place where any one identifier is the final frontier of oppression.
beth ditto, i thank you for being a strong, fat, queer girl, and for all of the awareness you've raised about what it's like to be fat in the spotlight and in the mainstream, but it takes so much more than that to hold my respect. where'd your good politics go, girl? the ones that made us all fall in love with you in the first place? we're all waiting for your response...
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