3 Quotes & Sayings By Sunaura Taylor

Sunaura is an accomplished poet and novelist and an award-winning author and columnist. She is the recipient of numerous national and international awards, including the International Writer's Festival Award for Best Fiction Anthology, The Creole Literary Award for Poetry, and the Southern Independent Booksellers Alliance Award for Literature. She is also a member of the Seven Sisters Writers' Circle. Her first novel, "The Good Life," published in 2009 by CreateSpace, won the 2010 Readers' Favorite Book Award in fiction Read more

Her second novel, "The Sugar Queen," will be available in 2013. She currently resides in Nashville, Tennessee with her husband and four children.

1
It's not that there are no challenges to becoming a vegetarian or vegan, but in the media, including authors of popular books on food and food politics, contribute to the 'enfreakment' of what is so often patronizingly referred to as the vegan or vegetarian 'lifestyle.' But again, the marginalization of those who care about animals is nothing new. Diane Beers writes in her book For the Prevention of Cruelty: The History and Legacy of Animal Rights Activism in the United States that 'several late nineteenth-century physicians concocted a diagnosable for of mental illness to explain such bizarre behavior. Sadly, they pronounced these misguided souls suffered from "zoophilpsychosis."' As Beers describes, zoophilpsychosis (an excessive concern for animals) was more likely to be diagnosed in women, who were understood to be 'particularly susceptible to the malady.' As the early animal advocacy movement in Britain and the United States was largely made up of women, such charges worked to uphold the subjugation both of women and of nonhuman animals. Sunaura Taylor
2
It is difficult to ascertain what role these articles play in marginalizing the vegetarian experience when there are so many more pressing issues that confront individuals who might otherwise choose to try to become vegetarian or vegan, such as the lack of healthy affordable food in low-income neighborhoods, often largely inhabited by people of color, and a government that subsidizes and promotes animal and sugar-heavy diets over ones with vegetables and fruits. yet rather than focus on these series structural barriers, many articles on vegetarianism and veganism often present the challenge of avoiding meat and animal products as challenge to one's very own normalcy and acceptability. Sunaura Taylor