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Shrink: Story of a Fat Girl - by Rachel M Thomas (Paperback)
About this item
Highlights
- Fat girl problems.
- About the Author: Rachel M. Thomas is Assistant Professor of Comics, Graphic Novels, and Sequential Arts at Teesside University.
- 180 Pages
- Comics + Graphic Novels, Contemporary Women
Description
About the Book
A graphic novel examining the fat body in contemporary Western culture through the experiential journey of the book's hero, who chooses to lose weight in a world that has dictated the medical and social dangers of being too fat.
Book Synopsis
Fat girl problems. Derided by her high-school peers for being overweight, Rachel finally found a sense of purpose and belonging in a promising career as an EMT--that is, until her body got in the way. Shrink is a work of graphic medicine that depicts the emotional and physical realities of inhabiting a large body in a world that is constantly warning about the medical and social dangers of being "too fat." This smart and candid book challenges the idea that weight loss is the only path for a fat person and encourages the reader to question the prevailing cultural and medical discourse about fat bodies. Seamlessly weaving the most current research on the fatness debate with her own experiences of living in a fat body, Thomas lays bare society's obsession with size and advocates for each of us to push back on body weight bias and determine what's right for our own health and well-being, both physical and mental.Review Quotes
"A compelling, thoughtful and personal account of navigating a fatphobic society."
--Rosie Nelson The Conversation
"Challenges readers to confront their personal biases, as [Thomas] has done on her own, and brings light to the lived experience of fat people weary of receiving unsolicited advice."
--Vi Kwartler Booklist
"Shrink is such an important graphic novel on a very important subject--fat discrimination-- which is endemic in healthcare and embedded at a policy level. This moving story highlights (with references!) the physical and psychological cost that may be incurred by attempting to adhere to societal and medical norms. I wish I could give a copy of Rachel Thomas's book to every healthcare student in the land."
--Ian Williams, author of The Bad Doctor
"Nuanced and vulnerable, this succeeds as both a body-politics primer and a personal story of the rocky path to self-acceptance."
--Publishers Weekly
About the Author
Rachel M. Thomas is Assistant Professor of Comics, Graphic Novels, and Sequential Arts at Teesside University. She is an interdisciplinary artist/researcher whose work blurs the boundaries between traditional media, technology, and bio-fabrication.