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list price: $12.99
edition:eBook
also available: Paperback
category: Literary Collections
published: Sep 2020
ISBN:9781773860459
publisher: Caitlin Press

BIG

Stories about Life in Plus-Sized Bodies

edited by Christina Myers, contributions by Katy Weicker; Rabbit Richards; Jo Jefferson; Cate Root; Tracy Manrell; Lynne Jones; Tara Mandarano; Elizabeth Cook; Andrea Hansell; Heather M. Jones; Emily Allan; Cassie Stocks; Shadoe Ball; Ama Scriver; Caroline Many; Jennifer Pownall; Heather van Mil; Layla Cameron; Jessie Blair; Sonja Boon; Jen Arbo; Sally Quon; Rohini Bannerjee; Simone Blais & Susan Alexander

tagged: essays, women authors, feminist
Description

Pop culture stereotypes, shopping frustrations, fat jokes, and misconceptions about health are all ways society systemically rejects large bodies. BIG is a collection of personal and intimate experiences of plus size women, non-binary and trans people in a society obsessed with thinness. Revealing insights that are both funny and traumatic, surprising and challenging, familiar and unexpected, 26 writers explore themes as diverse as self perception, body image, fashion, fat activism, food, sexuality, diet culture, motherhood and more. These stories offer a closer look at what it means to navigate a world designed to fit bodies of a certain size (sometimes literally) and, in turn, invites readers to ask questions about—and ultimately reconsider—our collective and individual obsession with women’s bodies.

Contributors include Dr. Rohini Bannerjee, Amanda Scriver, Cassie Stocks, Jo Jefferson, Layla Cameron, Rabbit Richards, Sonja Boon, Simone Blais, Tracy Manrell and other writers from across Canada, the US, and the UK.

About the Authors

Christina Myers

CHRISTINA MYERS is a writer, editor, and former journalist. She is the author of the novel The List of Last Chances, winner of the Canadian Book Club Award for Fiction and longlisted for the Leacock Medal for Humour, and editor of the award-winning anthology BIG. An alumnus of the Writer’s Studio at Simon Fraser University, she now teaches creative writing through SFU’s continuing studies. She is a member of Da’naxda’xw First Nation and lives in Surrey, British Columbia.


Katy Weicker resides in Victoria, BC, and attends the University of Victoria, where she is chipping away at her BA in writing. A former staff writer for Camosun College’s Nexus Newspaper, she has also had work appear in Island Writer Magazine as well as UVic’s The Warren and The Martlet. She is pleased to report her cats have not attempted to eat her face to date—knock on wood!

Rabbit Richards is learning how to exist on stolen land in a marginalized body. The Brooklyn-born poet writes into the awkward to explore the connections we deny and mischaracterize, blending the politics of race, love and gender with the emotional grounding of lived experience. They serve as the chairperson of the Anti-Oppression Committee for the board of Spoken Word Canada and as accessibility coordinator for Verses Festival of Words. When not touring, they make their home in Lek'leki, Downtown Eastside Vancouver.

Jo Jefferson is a Toronto-based queer writer and parent who grew up in Nova Scotia. Their essay, “How I (Finally) Became a Genderqueer Parent,” was included in Caitlin Press’s anthology Swelling with Pride. Their first novel, Lightning and Blackberries, was released by Nimbus Publishing in 2008. When they’re not writing or swimming, Jo hangs out with their kids, works at a community centre, explores the world and facilitates workshops with creators of all ages.

Cate Root is a writer. She is part of the team behind Dogfish, a mixed-genre literary salon, and is building a better world with the New Orleans chapter of the Democratic Socialists of America. She writes love letters, poems, stories, essays, jokes, spells and way too many tweets. Find out more at cateroot.online.

Tracy Manrell was assigned female at birth. They now identify as non-binary transmasculine and use they/them/he/him pronouns. Tracy has lived their life large in many ways through decades of being hounded internally and externally by size bias, fat stigma and gender dysphoria. Their life is full of complexities and love. They live on unceded territories of the Squamish, Tsleil-Waututh and Musqueam peoples with their beloved queer partner of nearly twenty-five years and their two funny, smart and kind teenagers. Tracy is one of the few folks in the world who has a full beard and whose kids call them Mama. It’s a name of love, commitment and connection, not gender. In their spare time at home and afar, Tracy can almost always be found geocaching.

Lynne Jones is a teacher and life coach specializing in self-acceptance and self-esteem issues. She is currently working on her first non-fiction book, exploring these subjects in an attempt to encourage more people to understand themselves and discover their true passion. In her spare time, she can be found chasing her naughty border collie across the Welsh mountains or rocking out with her band on a tiny electric ukulele in the South Wales Valleys.

Tara Mandarano is a Pushcart Prize–nominated writer and editor based in Canada. Her work has been featured on the front page of the Huffington Post and has also appeared in Reader’s Digest, Chatelaine, Today’s Parent and Canadian Living. She is also a chronic illness and mental health advocate. Please visit taramandarano.com to see more of her writing, or follow her on Instagram and Twitter at @taramandarano.

Elizabeth Cook is an aspiring author who lives in a suburb of Toronto with her spouse and two children, Sully and Fitz, but will continue to call the Big Land, Labrador, her home. She believes sunrise is the best time of day and popcorn is a legitimate meal.

Andrea Hansell studied creative writing at Princeton University and earned a PhD in clinical psychology from the University of Michigan. She was a practising psychotherapist for many years and is now a consultant and scriptwriter for Glowmedia mental health education films. Her essays and short stories have appeared in publications including Lilith, Intima, daCunha and the Lascaux Review.

Heather M. Jones lives in Toronto with her husband, two young sons and two indignant cats. She can usually be found arguing with strangers on the internet or watching just one more episode on Netflix. You can follow Heather on Twitter and Instagram at @hmjoneswriter and on Facebook at /hmjoneswriter. To see more of her work, please visit hmjoneswriter.com.

Emily Allan is a freelance writer, editor and equality consultant whose work deals with intersectional feminism and body politics. Born and raised on a little island in British Columbia, she relocated in 2018 from Vancouver to Toronto, where she now runs a small writing group, affectionately and accurately named Snack Club. She holds a BA in anthropology and political science and an MA in anthropology from the University of British Columbia.

Cassie Stocks, in 2013, became the first woman in seventeen years to be awarded the Leacock Medal for humour writing for her novel Dance, Gladys, Dance. She has been published in magazines and journals such as Avenue, Literary Mama, Other Voices and Reader’s Digest. Cassie lives in Eston, Saskatchewan, and is the town librarian.

Shadoe Ball is a writer and artist from Sudbury, Ontario, who lives in Toronto. She was diagnosed with binge eating disorder at twenty-eight years old. Through group therapy programs, a HAES-informed nutritionist and a lot of self-discovery, she learned healthier coping mechanisms for stress and anxiety, such as flexing her creative muscles. She is thrilled to be included in this anthology and is eager for opportunities to connect with big ideas and curious people.

Amanda (Ama) Scriver is a freelance journalist best known for being fat, loud and shouty on the internet. Her written work has appeared on Healthline, BuzzFeed, the Washington Post, FLARE, The Walrus, Allure and Playboy, among others. She finds joy in drag, reality television, bold lipstick and potato chips—in no particular order. You can follow her everywhere on the internet at @amascriver.

Caroline Many is a prairie nomad living in Metro Vancouver. She’s been obsessed with online culture since the mid-1990s, when she first surfed the web as a staff music writer for EverythingCool.com. Over the past twenty years, her poetry, arts reviews and travel features have been published online and in print.

Jennifer Pownall served as the literary artist-in-residence for the City of Port Coquitlam. She co-facilitates a writers’ group, is the blog content manager and editor for Joanne Fedler Media and works as an editor and contributing writer for What’s On! Port Coquitlam. The Globe and Mail published her personal essay “I Am Bairnlorn,” which speaks to her experiences with infertility, a topic she is exploring in detail as she composes her memoir, Re:Birth.

Heather van Mil is a Canadian plus-sized body positivity advocate and freelance writer. She empowers women to love themselves and each other at every size. Her mission is to bring big, beautiful bodies to the mainstream, inspiring them to show up and take up space without apology. While her heart is split between the East and West Coasts, she currently resides in Halifax with her husband, two daughters and three fur babies. Follow her at @HeatherVanMil1.

Layla Cameron is a PhD candidate in the Simon Fraser University School of Communication. Her dissertation research focuses on the representation of non-normative bodies in both reality television and activist media as seen through an intersectional feminist lens grounded in fat studies, disability studies and critical race studies. Layla also works as a journalist, fat activist and documentary filmmaker. You can read more about Layla and her work at laylacameron.com.

Jessie Blair is a gender-fluid person of Mohawk and Celtic descent. They are in their third year of an undergraduate degree studying sociology and creative writing at the University of British Columbia. They have published several articles, including interviews, in Western Living and Vancouver magazines. One article about an LGBTQI storyteller project was published in Peace Arch News. Some of their short fiction stories have appeared in various anthologies created by Filidh Publishing. Their focus is fiction and non-fiction stories. In their spare time they play the ukulele and sing off key to their cat.

Sonja Boon is Professor of Gender Studies at Memorial University. An award-winning researcher, writer, teacher, and flutist, she is passionate abut life writing, archives, and identity. For six years, she was principal flutist of the Portland Baroque Orchestra (Oregon). In 2020, she was awarded the Royal Society of Canada's Ursula Franklin Award in Gender Studies. What the Oceans Remember is her fourth book.


Jen Arbo lives with her family in New Westminster, BC, where she works in the public sector. She holds a blue belt in karate, prefers to shoot her recurve bow sightless and cans a great jar of jam, though she swears she is not preparing for a dystopian future. Likes: snug socks, strong tea and a brand new dot-grid journal. Dislikes: heights, clutter and storage containers that have lost their matching lids. “Encircled” is her first published piece since her son was born and stole her brain a decade ago, and she’s happy to be back. You can find her online on various platforms as @jenarbo.

Sally Quon is a writer and photographer living in the beautiful Okanagan Valley, where she writes a weekly nature blog. When not out enjoying the back roads of the valley, she likes to spend time writing poetry and practising the art of quiet sitting. Her photography has appeared in Canadian Geographic magazine and in Nature Alberta’s birding brochures. Her poetic musings have found homes in an assortment of places.

Dr. Rohini Bannerjee, born and raised in Dartmouth, Nova Scotia, daughter of immigrants from Himachal Pradesh, India, is an associate professor of French and francophone studies in the Department of Modern Languages and Classics and a faculty member in the Asian studies, women and gender studies and international development studies programs at Saint Mary’s University in Halifax. Her primary research focuses on the literatures and cultures of the francophone Indian Ocean. Her poetry has appeared in Understorey Magazine and a short story in India in Canada, Canada in India (Cambridge Scholars, 2013). When she is not teaching or writing, Rohini enjoys life with her husband and three sons.

Simone Blais is a recovering journalist who writes in a communications department by day, edits works of non-fiction at night and escapes the clock by crafting fiction and poetry in between. Her poems have appeared in Trickhouse and Other:____ Magazine. An alumna of Simon Fraser University and Banff Centre for Arts and Creativity, she calls the Okanagan home and can be found online at simoneblais.com.

Susan Alexander has been called “a big girl” since the day she was born. She is the author of The Dance Floor Tilts, a book of poems. Her work has appeared in chapbooks and several literary magazines. One poem is currently riding the Vancouver buses (Poetry in Transit, 2018–19). Susan lives on Bowen Island, BC, which she acknowledges as the traditional, unceded territory of the Squamish Nation.
Awards
  • Runner-up, Independent Publisher Book Awards (IPPY)

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