Decolonising My Body
A radical exploration of rituals and beauty
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- £9.99
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- £9.99
Publisher Description
A 2023 POLITICAL BOOK OF THE YEAR (WATERSTONES) | 'GROUND-BREAKING' Bernardine Evaristo | 'UNIVERSAL AND TIMELY' Elif Shafak | 'IMPORTANT' Sathnam Sanghera | 'A GENEROUS OFFERING' Nana Darkoa Sekiyamah | 'QUIETLY RADICAL' Evening Standard | 'INTIMATE' Guardian
What can ancestral practices teach us about how to live fuller lives today?
Upon turning forty, Afua Hirsch had an encounter that forever altered her preconceived notions of ancestry and body image, making her question everything from body-modification rituals such as tattoos and piercings to the foundations of sexuality, as well as attitudes towards puberty, ageing and death. This book charts her year-long journey of radical unlearning. Bringing together global scholarship, on-the-ground reportage, personal anecdotes and interviews with beauty experts, practitioners and service users, she reassesses notions of body image beyond those of the colonial, patriarchal gaze.
Decolonising My Body is a powerful excavation of the Eurocentric beauty standards that have long shaped how, in particular, those from the Global Majority are perceived and view themselves. Taking us from puberty to end-of-life, Hirsch shows us that the ways in which we adorn and present ourselves have spiritual implications and shape the possibilities we see for ourselves in the world.
These insights and discoveries will empower you to reconnect with your own ancestry, better understand the link between beauty, history and (respectability) politics, and liberate yourself from mainstream standards and systems that aren’t serving you.
*Co-host of the LOYALTY podcast with Peter Frankopan*
APPLE BOOKS REVIEW
Afua Hirsch continues to explore the impact of racist schools of thought at a macro level by examining key issues through a personal lens in Decolonising My Body, a memoir covering a year of her life. Part historical and sociological study, part self-discovery, the book is reminiscent of the kind of literature aimed at teenage girls navigating the changes of puberty—albeit from a more mature and nuanced perspective. Hirsch’s stated aim—to break down Eurocentric beauty standards and unpick her relationship to them—does require a mental reset of sorts, and the research and anecdotes she weaves through her own reflections are crucial in driving home how toxic, insidious messages about women’s bodies are embedded in the foundations of our culture. Hirsch is only one woman, so what resonates here will differ from reader to reader, but as a broad representation of the damage Western ideals inflict on women of colour, Decolonising My Body is picture perfect.