Welcome to the NAAFA Community Voices Blog!
Under the guidance of editor Samantha Puc and the NAAFA Board of Directors, the Community Voices Blog features writing from members of the fat community and our allies, especially those who are also disabled, LGBTQIA2S+, People of Color, and superfat/infinifat. We prioritize pieces that approach fat liberation and fat rights through an intersectional lens and seek to feature a diverse array of voices on fat experiences, cultural critiques of fatness in media, and more.
Additionally, we spotlight fat changemakers and provide resource guides and other tools for our community to engage in combating anti-fatness, advocating for fat rights, creating anti-racist approaches to fat liberation, and supporting systematically excluded communities.
The NAAFA Community Voices Blog seeks to cover all aspects of the fat experience, which often includes difficult subject matter. Although we do not accept pro-diet or pro-weight loss content for the blog, some posts may discuss diet culture and weight loss within the context of fat acceptance and liberation. Individual posts will include more specific content warnings.
DISCLAIMER: Any views or opinions stated on the NAAFA Community Voices Blog are personal and belong solely to the author. They do not represent the views or opinions of NAAFA or the people, institutions, or organizations the owner may or may not be associated with in professional or personal capacities, unless explicitly stated. Any views or opinions are not intended to malign any religion, ethnic group, club, organization, company, or individual.
If you have an idea for the NAAFA Community Voices Blog, please pitch via this form!
To keep up with what’s going on at NAAFA, be sure to subscribe to our newsletter and follow us on most social media @NAAFAOfficial and on Facebook @EqualityAtEverySize.
The History of Health at Every Size®: Chapter 4: The 1980s
The decade of the 1980s was characterized in part by Reagonomics and a “greed is good” business ethos; the burgeoning size of Americans along with a greater societal focus on physical fitness; women increasingly entering and competing in the workforce; the emergence of AIDS; the explosive rise of personal computing, and the end of the Berlin Wall and the Cold War.
The Importance of Intersectionality
An intersectional view of fat activism is key to NAAFA’s survival as an organization.
The History of Health at Every Size®: Chapter 3: The 1970s
The 1970s saw the building of feminism, iconoclasm, introspection, a peace movement regarding Vietnam, and mounting pressure on women to be thinner.
NAAFA Chronicles 57: The Cambridge Diet, The Dieter's Dilemma, Nutri/Systems Accused of Fraud
This month’s historical document is NAAFA’s 57th newsletter, Summer 1983.
The History of Health at Every Size®: Chapter 2: The 1960s
The size acceptance movement was born.
NAAFA Chronicles 55: 1983 Ohio Legislation Update, Convention Memories and Nightlife
This month’s historical document is NAAFA’s 55th newsletter, May-June 1983.
REGISTER TO VOTE! It’s your right.
IT IS IMPERATIVE that we register and vote in both federal and local elections. Your vote DOES matter.
The History of Health at Every Size®: An Introduction
Health at Every Size® (HAES®) exists because of prejudice against extra weight/fatness.