Fat, Black, and Ugly: The Semiotic Production of Prodigious Femininities

IF 1.6 Q1 ANTHROPOLOGY Transforming Anthropology Pub Date : 2021-04-01 DOI:10.1111/traa.12208
Krystal A. Smalls
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引用次数: 4

Abstract

Taking up the trinomial “fat, Black, and ugly” as a discomforting point of departure, this piece explores several ways fatness and Blackness are discursively constructed as social comorbidities for feminine people and examines how this discourse affects lived experience. It considers how the discursive field in which “fat, Black, and ugly” dwells traverses temporal and social scales: from early twentieth‐century science discourse to recent social media discourse, and from state policies to inner voices. Inspired by Gina Athena Ulysse’s rasanblaj approach, the analysis uses a combination of personal narrative/autoethnography and discourse analysis, and draws from sociocultural anthropology, linguistic anthropology, Black feminist studies, African feminist studies, and fat studies. I convene these fields and methodologies in an effort to think about a semiotic collusion between fatness and Blackness that expels certain subjects from legible and legitimate humanness and value in an anti‐Black anthroposphere—or, via the illuminations of Hortense Spillers, that renders them prodigious flesh that prevails in the beyond.
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胖、黑、丑:惊人女性的符号学产物
这篇文章以“胖、黑、丑”三项作为一个令人不安的出发点,探讨了肥胖和黑人作为女性社会共病的几种方式,并考察了这种话语如何影响生活体验。它考虑了“胖、黑、丑”所处的话语领域如何跨越时间和社会尺度:从20世纪初的科学话语到最近的社交媒体话语,从国家政策到内心声音。受Gina Athena Ulysse的rasanblaj方法的启发,该分析结合了个人叙事/民族志和话语分析,并借鉴了社会文化人类学、语言人类学、黑人女权主义研究、非洲女权主义研究和肥胖研究。我召集这些领域和方法论,是为了思考肥胖和黑人之间的符号学勾结,这种勾结将某些主体从反黑人的人类领域中驱逐出清晰合法的人性和价值——或者,通过Hortense Spillers的启发,使他们成为一种在未来盛行的惊人的肉体。
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CiteScore
2.10
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0.00%
发文量
24
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