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It's Always Been Ours

Rewriting the Story of Black Women's Bodies

Audiobook
1 of 1 copy available
1 of 1 copy available

This "necessary book" (Roxanne Gay, New York Times bestselling author, Bad Feminist and Hunger) shares an essential look at the ways in which Black women are left out of conversations about "diet culture," health, and wellness.

In It's Always Been Ours, eating disorder specialist and storyteller Jessica Wilson challenges us to rethink the politics of body liberation by centering the bodies of Black women in our cultural discussions of self-image, food, health, and wellness. Interrogating a status quo that perpetuates white supremacist ideas about who Black women are, how they live in their bodies, and what Black health means, she creates a context for understanding how whiteness and capitalism have shaped the ways we view and treat our bodies, and how even well-intentioned solutions to this problem continue to center thin white women.
With an incisive blend of historical documents, the work of popular authors, and the narratives of clients, friends, and celebrities, Wilson examines the ways that ideas about respectability and restriction have harmed Black women. With wit and levity, she challenges what it means to have the "right" body, and helps all women understand that a radical reimagining of body narratives is a prerequisite for vibrant wellbeing. It's Always Been Ours is a love letter that encourages Black women to find joy in their bodies and their identities.

"There simply is no better literary voice for this moment in history than Jessica Wilson."—Sonya Renee Taylor, New York Times bestselling author, The Body is Not an Apology

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    • Kirkus

      January 15, 2023
      A deeply intimate critique of systematic racist and sexist inequities behind the so-called health-and-wellness industry. "Health has been connected to whiteness for over a century, it's nothing new," writes Wilson, a self-described "regular-degular" dietician. She continues: "Colonialism, white supremacy, and capitalism ensure that people assigned Blackness will never fit within the confines of Health." Written "specifically for Black women," the author's first book makes the case for "putting Black women at the center of the narratives, rather than having our stories filtered through a white lens." Wilson rewrites the narratives surrounding Black women's bodies and maps a collective and individual reclamation of Black joy. After the introduction, the author presents three sections. The first, "Live, Laugh, Love," features chapters such as "It Isn't Diet Culture, It's White Supremacy" and "Too Much, Yet Not Enough: Restriction." The second section, " 'Solutions'/Having a Body Is Hard," digs deeper into the myriad perils of body image and "the impacts of pathologizing people's bodies," and the final third, "A New Story," is dedicated to Black joy. Wilson peppers her arguments with dashes of humor, and her directness, acerbic tone, and honesty about her personal life and struggles with seizures make for compelling reading. Many of the author's arguments and insights are undeniable, and she unpacks them with both originality and candor--e.g., "Health disparities are not solved by teaching people how to cook quinoa and put sliced almond on salads." She recounts her experience at the 2021 Gwyneth Paltrow's In Goop Health summit, which gave "a glimpse of what it would mean to live a life of ease" but made her sick. She also references recent significant moments, such as Mo'Nique's 2021 Instagram live video on respectability. The most-repeated line Wilson tells her clients is to eat more food, in hopes that they will "enjoy it without overthinking it." This fiery polemic and celebration stands out among contemporary books on the subject of Black women's bodies.

      COPYRIGHT(2023) Kirkus Reviews, ALL RIGHTS RESERVED.

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Languages

  • English

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