Thinness Quotes

Quotes tagged as "thinness" Showing 1-7 of 7
Naomi Wolf
“To ask women to become unnaturally thin is to ask them to relinquish their sexuality.”
Naomi Wolf

Naomi Wolf
“If women cannot eat the same food as men, we cannot experience equal status in the community.”
Naomi Wolf

Jenni Schaefer
“Being thin created intense anxiety that I wouldn’t be able to maintain that weight for life, and I couldn’t.”
Jenni Schaefer, Goodbye Ed, Hello Me: Recover from Your Eating Disorder and Fall in Love with Life

Susan Sontag
“Twentieth century women's fashions (with their cult of thinness) are the last stronghold of the metaphors associated with the romanticizing of TB in the late eighteenth and early nineteenth centuries.”
Susan Sontag, Illness as Metaphor and AIDS and Its Metaphors

Latife Tekin
“It was also then that the women of Ak&‌ccedil;ah started a new custom. Underneath their garments they wrapped cloth bands around their waists to squeeze them tight. They were so awed by Zekiye's thin waist that, for a while, they ignored Atiye when she reminded them that this waist-thinning method wouldn't work unless they had started very young. But the women kept their waistbands on until the sheep-mating season to see what would happeend. Then they all began to wheeze. They found that in their zeal for having thin waists they had afflicted themselves with shortness of breath, coughing, flushes and sweating. A few had sores on their hands, faces and other parts of their bodies. Three women had problems with their eyes and speech. And when their waists started to swell up like logs, they all took off the cloth bands. "We're well past the age of waist-thinning," they said. All the same, they considered it their duty as mothers to raise their daughters to be as slender as Zekiye. They took lessons in the art of waist-thinning from Atiye and soon discovered that plastic bags were more effective than cloth bands. Thereafter, whenever they had girl babies, they would wash them with three bowls of water as soon as the umbilical cord was cut and then wrap plastic bags around their waists, blowing prayers on them all the while.”
Latife Tekin, Sevgili Arsız Ölüm

Lillian Hellman
“Very thin ladies, any age, with hand sewing on them, have always frightened me, beginning with a rich great-aunt and her underwear embroidered by nuns. The more bones that show on women the more inferior I feel.”
Lillian Hellman, An Unfinished Woman: A Memoir

“Je suis encore en colère. Si mon propre regard s'est aujourd'hui apaisé, j'ai la rage que les gens qui m'aiment ou m'aimaient, aient pu penser un jour que j'étais mieux mince, plus belle, plus heureuse, plus sympa... Est-ce qu'au fond iels pensent tou·te·s que ce "moi grosse" est moins bien ?”
Marie de Brauer, Ne jamais couler