ABSTRACT

YoungGiftedandFat is a critical autoethnography of "performing thin"– on the stage and in life. Sharrell D. Luckett’s story of weight loss and gain and playing the (beautiful, desirable, thin) leading lady showcases an innovative and interdisciplinary approach to issues of weight and self-esteem, performance, race, and gender. Sharrell structures her project with creative text, interviews, testimony, journal entries, dialogues, monologues, and deep theorizing through and about the abundance of flesh.

She explores the politics of Black culture, and particularly the intersections of her lived and embodied experiences. Her body and body transformation becomes a critical praxis to evidence fat as a feminist issue, fat as a Black-girl-woman issue, and fat as an ideological construct that is as much on the brain as it is on the body. YoungGiftedandFat is useful to any area of research or course offering taking up questions of size politics at the intersections of race and sexuality.

chapter |29 pages

Introduction

Contextualizing the Conundrum

chapter |25 pages

Touched

chapter |3 pages

Say It Ain’t So … Daddy Issues?

Talk “Fat” Session

chapter |9 pages

Disappearing Acts

chapter |20 pages

Passing Strange

chapter |5 pages

Fractured

Talk “Fat” Session

chapter |18 pages

Maintenance

chapter |6 pages

Weighted Loss

chapter |7 pages

Staging Life

Talk “Fat” Session

chapter |26 pages

“Younggiftedandfat”

(The Play)

chapter |12 pages

Fat Girl Futurity

chapter |1 pages

After PIC