Decolonize Self-Care

Alyson K Spurgas author Zo C Meleo-Erwin author Bhakti Shringarpure editor

Format:Paperback

Publisher:OR Books

Published:2nd Mar '23

Should be back in stock very soon

Decolonize Self-Care cover

  • Conduct dynamic social media campaign, running giveaways, offering discounts during publication week, and coordinating with key influencers.
  • Pitch excerpts and reviews to wide array of publications including Lux Magazine, The Nation, The New York Times, The New Yorker, The New York Review of Books, The Los Angeles Review of Books, The Guardian, The Times Literary Supplement, The Baffler, Harper’s, Publishers Weekly, Kirkus Reviews, Literary Hub, Guernica, Bookforum, Book Riot, Africa Is a Country, Morning Star, and more.
  • Pitch television, radio, and podcast interviews with authors.
  • Host book launch in New York, along with series of events in conjunction with other Decolonize That! authors.

For radical twentieth-century feminists, it was a rallying cry for bodily autonomy and political power. For influencers and lifestyle brands, it’s buying fancy nutrition and body products at a premium. And it has now infiltrated nearly every food, leisure, and pop-culture space as a multi-billion-dollar industry.
What is it? To quote a million memes: it’s called self-care.

In Decolonize Self-Care Alyson K. Spurgas and Zoë C. Meleo-Erwin deliver a comprehensive sociological analysis and scathing critique of the catchphrase’s capitalist, racist undertones. To decolonize self-care, they argue, requires a full reckoning with the exclusionary, appropriative nature of most of the wellness industry, but this education is only the first step in the process. We must commit to new models of care and well-being that allow for health, pleasure, and community—for everyone.

It often feels like there is nothing new to say about the contradictory politics of self-care. Behold Decolonize Self-Care. It brings a new diagnosis and critique to the crowded intersection of the self-care hot takes while making recommendations on both the theoretical and structural level. It is replete with insight on what perspective and practice is needed to survive the capitalist and racist day. It is smart, urgent, and often laugh out loud funny.
—Sarah Sharma, Associate Professor and Director of the ICCIT at the University of Toronto and author of In the Meantime: Temporality and Cultural Politics

Decolonize Self-Care not only details how far self care has traveled from its starting point as a Black feminist survival tactic, but how deeply and pervasively it has been transformed into highly monetized and self-serving logics. Throughout this hard-hitting book, they unfurl all the ways the poison of #SelfCare has been threaded into a wide array of seemingly disparate markets and movements. When Spurgas and Meleo-Erwin apply their incisive critique across the products and services we often consume as feel-good and healthy, their facades crumble, revealing much darker and more dangerous motives and outcomes. But they also provide a salve, urging readers to take on the task of more deference and less defensiveness, more collective action and less credit-card driven indulgence, that is, their prescription is more care, less self.
—Laura Mauldin, Associate Professor of Women's, Gender and Sexuality Studies, University of Connecticut

Decolonize Self-Care is a brisk and bracing dive into the colonial roots of contemporary wellness culture. Spurgas and Meleo-Erwin examine how the self-care industry continues primarily to benefit wealthy, white, western women in the global North, even as its proponents claim to have embraced new, inclusive, and social justice-oriented models of wellbeing. The authors make accessible complex concepts such as feminism, neoliberalism, and white supremacy in their analyses of how problematic notions of 'self-care' manifest in the examples of sexual enhancement, self-optimization, and diet.
—Colleen Derkatch, author of Why Wellness Sells

ISBN: 9781682193358

Dimensions: unknown

Weight: unknown

286 pages