Skip to content

S Y N A P S I S

a health humanities journal

  • Browse
  • Home
  • Special Issues
  • Writers
  • About
  • Contact

Tag: fatphobia

“Misshaped parts did them appall”: The Purulent Paradox of the “Skinny Fat” Body

Edmund Spenser’s Faerie Queene (1590, 1596), an allegorical romance epic, begins with Redcross, the fledgling hero of holiness who struggles to live up to his name. Time and again, he veers from the steady camaraderie of Una—an embodiment of the one, true, Protestant church—for the femme fatale Duessa, who’s stunning to look at but rotten…

Read More

“Novum Corpus, Pristina Mens”: Pandemic Forms of Weight Loss, or an Apology in Seven Cantos

Pasquale S. Toscano // Dat sparso capiti vivacis cornus cervi, Dat spatium collo summasque cacuminat aures Cum pedibusque manus, cum longis bracchia mutat Cruribus et velat maculoso vellere corpus; Additus et pavor est. … … ut vero vultus et cornua vidit in unda, ‘me miserum!’ dicturus erat: vox nulla secuta est; Ingemuit: vox illa fuit,…

Read More

Morality, aesthetics, and fatness: review of Sabrina Strings’ Fearing the Black Body

Emilie Egger // Strings, Sabrina. Fearing the Black Body: The Racial Origins of Fat Phobia. New York: New York University Press, 2019. Bathroom scales, sugar, Cosmopolitan magazine: these three items are linked in contemporary Western understanding of weight loss and management. The first is a gauge of adherence to medical and cultural norms of health;…

Read More
  • Browse
  • Special Issues
  • Writers
  • About
  • Contact
  • Browse
  • Special Issues
  • Writers
  • About
  • Contact

© 2026 Synapsis Journal

Twitter Instagram
WordPress.com.
 

Loading Comments...