- Published: 9 February 2024
- ISBN: 9780241629390
- Imprint: Allen Lane
- Format: Hardback
- Pages: 320
- RRP: $49.99
Unshrinking
How to Fight Fatphobia











- Published: 9 February 2024
- ISBN: 9780241629390
- Imprint: Allen Lane
- Format: Hardback
- Pages: 320
- RRP: $49.99
As someone raised in the era of 'nothing tastes as good as skinny feels,' I am beyond grateful to Kate Manne for ushering in the era of Unshrinking. This book is a tasty, tasty takedown of diet culture and a firm-but-gentle guide to finally getting free from fatphobia - individually, collectively, and within society at large. Is it too much to say that Manne has written a big, fat masterpiece?
Jessica DeFino
Required reading for everyone who lives in an unruly human body. Manne has crafted an elegant, fierce, and profound argument for fighting fat oppression in ourselves, our communities, our culture
Roxane Gay
Trust Kate Manne to provide the clearest statement of the problems of the twenty-first century. She shows us, through science, reason, and human experience, the moral failure of fatphobia, in direct contradiction of the widespread and toxic narrative of fatness as a moral failing
Emily Nagoski
A tour de force that only someone with Kate Manne's particular mix of rigor, clarity, and writerly skill could pull off—a must-read, no matter your body size, and an unignorable call to action
Anne Helen Peterson
To be fat in a thin-obsessed world is to be treated as a moral failure all the time. Through impeccable research, compelling writing, and refreshing honesty, Unshrinking undoes so much of that undeserved shame. . . . A rich text for the ages, one we should all read, especially if we desire to create a world that treats fat people with more dignity and less disdain than this one
Evette Dionne
If you have ever struggled to feel safe in your body as it is; if you have ever wondered who your body is for, Manne has articulated the answers: Our bodies belong to us. We are all better for her work
Virginia Sole-Smith
Kate Manne lays bare the sinister power of fatphobia—its pervasiveness, its roots in anti-Blackness, its shoddy logic—and argues beautifully and clearly for the moral necessity to resist it. Both trenchant and moving, Unshrinking is a long overdue reckoning and a manifesto for true intersectionality
Kimberlé Crenshaw
An essential book of impossible-to-overstate importance, Unshrinking is a lucid, vital addition to the fat canon
Carmen Maria Machado
A vital social justice issue ... Kate Manne's words will make you feel anger at how fatphobia has harmed the minds and bodies of so many
Psychologies
An intimate and razor-sharp examination of fatphobia to expose the gaslighting, double standards and conditioning behind size discrimination. Manne’s new framework of "body reflexivity" offers valuable new ways and words to fight the existing power structures of fat oppression
Ms. Magazine
A clarion call for fat people to be liberated
Natasha Poliszczuk, Mail on Sunday
A potent and unsettling piece of social philosophy... As a polemic, Unshrinking works. Manne’s case for the harmfulness of fatphobia is compelling. But the book’s greatest strength is its author’s personal narrative and the sense of justified grievance that runs through the prose like a line of fire... Unshrinking demonstrates amply the importance of aspiring to care a little less about the unruly behaviour of our irrepressible flesh
Times Literary Supplement
Unshrinking could be prescribed reading for anyone who has an embattled relationship with food and body size, although it is also a call to arms for all… convincing… I wish my parents, doctors and teachers had been able to read this book long ago
Sarah Moss, Lancet