Authors
Ashlea Gillon, Cat Pausé
Publication date
2022/1/2
Journal
Fat Studies
Volume
11
Issue
1
Pages
8-21
Publisher
Routledge
Description
This paper explores dual understandings of fatness and health from Kaupapa Māori and Fat Studies perspectives. Fatness for Indigenous peoples can be complex and an entanglement of multiple oppressions. Often Māori understandings of bodies and fatness that reflect whakapapa (genealogy, ancestry, layering of those we come from) and culture are excluded from health contexts and discourses. Understanding fatness and health from a Kaupapa Māori perspective creates space to include these aspects of who we are as Māori and what fatness and body size and shape means for us without being limited or restricted by sizeism, healthism or deficit discourses. Fat studies acknowledges the cultural constraints against fat people and fat bodies and the structural oppression that prevents fat people from accessing public services, including evidence-based healthcare. Fat studies approaches present alternative …
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