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Occupy This Body: A Buddhist Memoir
Author Suh, Sharon A. (著)
VolumeFall
Date2019
Pages212
PublisherSumeru Press Inc
Publisher Url https://sumeru-books.com/
LocationOntario, Canada [安大略省, 加拿大]
Content type書籍=Book
Language英文=English
NoteAuthor Affiliation: Seattle University, USA.
AbstractOCCUPY THIS BODY: A Buddhist Memoir is the story of Religious Studies Professor Sharon A. Suh's struggle to overcome a childhood of forced-feeding, emotional neglect, and cruelty from her Korean immigrant mother who battled and eventually succumbed to her own eating disorders. As she matures and awakens to her own body, she must come to terms with her past suffering and how it shapes her experiences as a Korean American woman raised and educated within predominantly upper middle-class white America. In this memoir she shares her discovery, study, and embrace of Buddhism to help her heal from past trauma and lay bare the cultural silence surrounding abuse and mental illness in Asian American families.

Occupy This Body offers an intimate portrait of growing up in Long Island as a second generation Korean American in what appears to be a model minority household where respect for elders, sacrifice, hard work, and academic achievement hold sway. But beneath this veneer of success that takes her from the suburbs to Harvard and into a marriage of seeming perfection and eventual divorce, she struggles with the devastating effects of growing up with an abusive mother who suffered from anorexia, bulimia, and mental illness as she directed her wrath--and her eating disorders-- onto her. To survive, she must learn to feel at home in her ever-changing body and begin to occupy her own space in the world that has often rendered her invisible as an Asian American woman. Tackling the myth of the Asian American model minority, the shame around mental illness and abuse in Asian American families, and the pervasive pressures aimed at disciplining female bodies, Suh strips away the psychic and social bandages that have shielded her wounds from public view, reimagining Buddhism as an empowering and transformative framework for reclaiming, and occupying, our imperfect bodies.

Occupy This Body thus confronts the heavy burdens of silence and invisibility that still threaten to ensnare Asian American women in America today. Appealing to readers interested in Buddhism, women of color, the Korean-American immigration experience, abuse and eating disorders, Occupy This Body contributes to the growing literature in memoirs about the body, second-generation immigrant experiences, and what it means to be a person of color in contemporary America. Theoretically grounded in Buddhist studies, feminism and the growing scholarship on the body, Occupy This Body is a deeply-nuanced personal memoir written in an accessible voice by a professor of religion who learned to keep her childhood trauma, and history of enforced eating disorders, a secret from all but her closest friends.
Table of contentsPrologue
Force Feeding
A Good Daughter is a Quiet Daughter
Contents Under Pressure
Silence is Survival
Under My Mother’s Gaze
Body Scan
Her Body as a Skin Sack
Finding Strength in the Body
Paul
Shift
Finding the Buddha
A Hungry Ghost
Male Gaze
Choosing Buddhism
A Death and a Diagnosis
Finding the Mat
Marriage and Motherhood
Running to Empty
Finding the Cushion
Meditation as Self-Love
Retreat and Take Up Space
Occupy This Body
Epilogue
About the Author
Acknowledgments
ISBN9781896559506 (pbk); 1896559506
Related reviews
  1. Book Review: Occupy This Body: A Buddhist Memoir by Sharon Suh / McGuire, Beverley Foulks (評論)
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Created date2024.05.21
Modified date2024.05.21



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