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Fat Black Girl In A Fat Hating Culture Summary

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Margaret K Bass's article "On Being a Fat Black Girl in a Fat-Hating Culture" was a story of a woman's journey as a "fat" African American women in America (Bass 2011). Bass moved from Pittsburgh, PA to Jacksonville, FL during the Jim Crow Era. Her parents worked hard to ensure that her and her brother were prepared for the ridicule they would receive about their race. As prevalent as racism was in the south, Bass manages to endure through that time to become a proud African American. However, she begins with tales from her childhood about the ultimate humiliation she received for, not her skin tone, but her weight. She is haunted by the past and still relives the horrors from her childhood, but not in the same way. She says that as she has grown up, the 'issue' of her body image has varied based on location (Bass 2011). For instance, when she lived in Mississippi (in a primarily African American community) she received nothing but praise and appreciation. Whereas when she paved her way into a "white middle-class" she began to feel secluded at luncheons and dinners when she was the only person eating (Bass 2011). Not only has Bass battled to conform her race and to remain proud of it, the real battle she feels was trying to find self-appreciation for her fatness.

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