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Female fat [as] a moral issue is articulated with words like good and bad. If our culture’s fixation on female fatness or thinness was about sex, it would be private issue between a woman and her lover; if it were about health, between a woman and herself… A cultural fixation on female thinness is not an obsession about female beauty but one about obedience.

Naomi Wolf The Beauty Myth

I’ve always wondered why being fat is bad. Why is it bad? Think about it: why is being not super skinny BAD?  Who made it that way? 

(via ickyjane)

Reblogged from Internet Winnage
Those who subvert social norms are, ostensibly, people who have forgotten that they can be seen, publicly, at any time. Therefore, when they transgress social norms—by expressing physical affection for a person not visibly coded as the opposite sex, for example, or by being fat and rejecting social and bodily invisibility—they need to be reminded of this omniscient social gaze, and in the absence of institutional discipline, must be punished so they do not transgress again. This is the mechanism by which a dude who sees me in a vividly-colored dress, walking alone as though I either don’t know or don’t care that I am defying bodily norms, feels compelled to scream “UGLY FAT BITCH” at me. He is applying social discipline and teaching me a lesson: Everyone can see you, and your body and/or behavior are unacceptable.
Reblogged from The Fist of Artemis
Yes, we live in a sexist culture, in which women have no good choices when it comes to our bodies. We live in a sexist culture in which women are valued primarily as sexual objects, and at the same time are shamed for our sexuality. It seems to me that we have two choices as to how to respond to this. We can try to navigate the narrow, essentially impossible shoals of these contradictory expectations, and try to find that perfect, socially acceptable line between slut and prude.

Or we can say, “Fuck it. There is no way I can win — so I’m going to do whatever the fuck I want. I’m going to wear overalls, or I’m going to wear high heels. I’m going to have sex with twenty strangers in a night, or I’m not going to have sex with anyone. I’m going to dress conservatively and professionally in public at all times, or I’m going to sell naked pictures of myself on the Internet if I bloody well feel like it.”

And in saying, “I can’t win, so I’m going to do whatever the fuck I want to do,” we can create the beginnings of a victory. We can create the beginnings of a world where we really can win. We can create the beginnings of a world where we’re a little more free than the women who came before us… and where the women who come after us are a little more free than we are. We probably can’t create a perfect world, where women’s bodies aren’t commodified in the slightest (not in this generation, anyway). But we can create a better world: a world where women’s bodies and minds belong less to the patriarchy, and more to ourselves.

Greta Christina (What I May Do With My Naked Body: A Reply to Azar Majedi About the #NudePhotoRevolutionaries Calendar)

That is if you actually have the privilege to decide not to give a fuck, but yeah, this.

Reblogged from sex is not the enemy

One of the best tools we have at our disposal for figuring out our bodies, for learning about them and coming to delight in them, is experience. Someone else might say “exploration” or “experimentation” and mean something similar to what I mean. I’m talking about starting from data and working toward conclusions rather than the opposite; something very much like a sexy mad scientist (white lab coats and leather gloves optional.)

I’m talking about beginning with sensation, not with names, vocabulary, or the things we think we know about our bodies. I’m talking about the kind of earnest self-investigation behind using a mirror to look at parts of yourself you couldn’t otherwise see. I’m talking about keeping an open mind and considering the distinct possibility that you are looking at uncharted territory.

Fucking Trans Women

Ahhhh, FTW is such an amazing zine! Packed with good stuff and totally worth the cover price.

(via transcending-anatomy)

Reblogged from Because I am a Woman

A video performance on women’s rights by Spanish feminist revolutionaries.

When I’m on the train, I read my favorite gay magazine. I can’t remember having ever seen someone who looks like me on the cover. When I read it I see more ads - for underwear, cologne, cruises, hotels, and clothes - with people who don’t look like me. None of the writers look like me, nor are there any stories about anyone who looks like me. When I finally see an advertisement with someone who shares my skin color, the advertisement is for HIV medication.

While I’m waiting for my friend in the gayborhood hotspot I notice that none of the bartenders, DJs, or waiters look like me, nor do most of the clientele. Out of boredom, I fiddle around with the Grindr mobile dating app on my iPhone. My screen is filled with different faces, bodies, and torsos of men in the area. One particularly handsome man attracts my attention, until I read the “NO ASIANS” typed in angry capped letters on his profile. I wonder how I would feel if I were Asian.

After having a few drinks with my friend, I walk home through the garment district in midtown Manhattan. I see a gay male couple walking hand in hand down the street. They also do not look like me. In fact, they look like they could be in one of the gay cruise ads I see in my favorite magazine. Their relaxed and happy faces turn frightened when they see me, and they immediately cease holding hands and separate. On this late night in an unfamiliar area of the city, I am not seen as a member of the LGBT community. I am black. I am male. I am a threat.

Reblogged from fuckyeahbisexuals
Fat acceptance doesn’t simply advocate in favor of fatness. Fat acceptance is also about rejecting a culture that encourages us to rage and lash out at our bodies, even to hate them, for looking a certain way. It’s about setting our own boundaries and knowing ourselves, and making smart decisions about how we live and treat ourselves, and ferociously defending the privacy of those choices. It’s about promoting the idea that anything you do with your body should come from a place of self-care and self-love, not from guilt and judgment and punishment. It’s about demanding that all bodies, no matter their appearance or age or ability, be treated with basic human respect and dignity. That’s the world I’d like to build. For all of us.
Reblogged from Tangled Up In Lace

Embodiment: A Portrait of Queer Life in America

Embodiment is a collection of short films and photographs which explore the varied experiences of queer lives in America.

In 2011, Embodiment will be launched as a gallery installation and a multimedia website with new short films + over 60 photographic portraits released weekly. We feel that its important these films are free and available for you - no matter where you are in the world.

Embodiment: A Portrait of Queer Life in America, is the first ever comprehensive web based documentary and archive to explore the LGBTTQ community in America as a whole. This project explores the lives of individuals from urban and rural areas, and engages with the connecting themes of love, religion, race, class, family, geography and gender identity. We create photographic and video portraits of each person we encounter and offer individuals a chance to speak for themselves. We believe this project has the potential to ignite real social and individual change on a global level.

www.EmbodimentUSA.com

http://www.kickstarter.com/projects/embodiment/embodiment-a-portrait-of-queer-life-in-america

Reblogged from Fancy as Fuck
Tags: art body nude
ourskin:

Javier Santaren Ruiz, Compression de corps, circa 1980.

ourskin:

Javier Santaren Ruiz, Compression de corps, circa 1980.

Reblogged from skin
razzberry:

Imperfections? 
 by RosaLee Ward
10.5 x 10.5” silver gelatin print, lettering scratched into emulsion
“A  continuation of the body image project I began earlier this semester.  I  felt like I really needed to branch out from the straightforward  portraiture I was doing before, and really dig into the grit of the  issue.
The text was selected for each photo based on what my  models told me they did not like about their bodies, or other parts of  conversation I had with them while we were shooting.  By ripping into  the emulsion of the prints, I am representing the way in which people  rip themselves apart in front of the mirror.  This section of my  exploration into body image issues deals specifically with things that  people do not like about themselves, and I’m so proud of each of my  models for being brave enough to allow me to photograph things that they  don’t like about themselves.”
(RosaLee’s personal tumblr)
This is a photo of me and one of my many insecurities, taken by my best friend.

razzberry:

Imperfections?

by RosaLee Ward

10.5 x 10.5” silver gelatin print, lettering scratched into emulsion

“A continuation of the body image project I began earlier this semester. I felt like I really needed to branch out from the straightforward portraiture I was doing before, and really dig into the grit of the issue.

The text was selected for each photo based on what my models told me they did not like about their bodies, or other parts of conversation I had with them while we were shooting. By ripping into the emulsion of the prints, I am representing the way in which people rip themselves apart in front of the mirror. This section of my exploration into body image issues deals specifically with things that people do not like about themselves, and I’m so proud of each of my models for being brave enough to allow me to photograph things that they don’t like about themselves.”

(RosaLee’s personal tumblr)

This is a photo of me and one of my many insecurities, taken by my best friend.

Reblogged from razzberry
hellagay:

check out this awesome site: The Nu Project

hellagay:

check out this awesome site: The Nu Project

Reblogged from Chauvinist Sushi
whimwam:

Some Men: For a more complete catalog of masculine body types, see humanity.

whimwam:

Some Men: For a more complete catalog of masculine body types, see humanity.

Reblogged from Daily Murf