Fat Studies has come into its own as a field in the last 10-15 years. The study of weight stigma and the specific implications for fat bodies has gained increasing traction in a range of interdisciplinary settings. While the field has deeply intersectional investments in identity related scholarship such as critical disability studies and queer and trans literatures, Fat Studies has been rightly accused of a lack of attention to the specific implications of race. Though contemporary research aims to address this limitation (Friedman, Rice, and Rinaldi, 2020; Strings, 2019, among others), there is still a surprising lack of attention to the specificities of how fat phobia is displayed among BIPOC communities, particularly as these communities live within other complicated intersections and experiences. Our research has addressed this gap.
Through immersive first-person storytelling in the form of digital stories, nine brilliantly created digital stories which illustrate the complexities, tenderness, and power at the intersections of weight and race were created. Our presentation will provide an overview of the digital storytelling process via a virtual format during the COVID-19 pandemic, unpack the complicating and intricate themes that weave our stories together, share a 27-minute screening of our stories, and provide the audience to participate in a Q and A session with the storytellers. Our stories embody and assert that “our bodies are more than our bodies.”
Presenters

May Friedman
May Friedman’s (she/her) research looks at unstable identities, including bodies that do not conform to traditional racial and national or aesthetic lines. Most recently much of May’s research has focused on intersectional approaches to fat studies considering the multiple and fluid experiences of both fat oppression and fat activism.

Sonia Meerai
Sonia Meerai is a Ph.D. student in the Gender, Feminist and Women Studies at the Faculty of Graduate Studies, York University. Her main research areas include critical feminist approaches to understanding health technology, tracking applications, and at-home health management technologies at the intersections of gender, fatphobia/weight stigma, race/racism, surveillance, and bio-capitalism. Issues undertaken at these intersections include: (in)fertility, cardiovascular health, and chronic conditions (i.e., COPD, heart failure, diabetes).