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Kristin Denise Rowe (33361215)
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CSFB 16 (1) pp. 41–58 Intellect Limited 2025
Critical Studies in Fashion & Beauty
Volume 16 Number 1
www.intellectbooks.com 41
© 2025 Intellect Ltd Article. English language. https://doi.org/10.1386/csfb_00088_1
Received 15 January 2024; Accepted 2 December 2024; Published Online April 2025
KRISTIN DENISE ROWE
California State University, Fullerton
Positioning the body: Black
womanhood, beauty and
exploring body neutrality
ABSTRACT
Within current discourse around beauty standards and body politics, the concept
of ‘body neutrality’ has been offered an alternative to the concept of ‘body positiv-
ity’. Rather than heavy emphasis on the ‘self-love’ of one’s body, or loving one’s
perceived ‘flaws’ or features, body neutrality suggests we think of our bodies as
vessels that allow us to do work in the world. The concept of body neutrality
moves beyond thinking of bodies as things to be looked at, appraised or ‘loved’.
Black women’s relationship to concepts of beauty and body politics has always
been complex and contentious. The bodies of Black women and femmes have
historically been marginalized, othered and/or erased. In this article, I ask: what
about Black women’s relationship to the concept of body neutrality? What are the
stakes of Black women taking on a body neutral stance? Through a Black femi-
nist framework, I explore the utility of ‘body neutrality’. I argue that while body
neutrality may offer a useful way for individual people to heal body negative senti-
ments, a more structural, subversive critique is needed for the liberation of Black
women and all oppressed peoples. I maintain that it is difficult for Black women to
lay claim to body neutrality. Bodies should not matter, but Black women’s bodies
are always seen in political and socio-historical contexts. Ultimately, in exploring
the contours and limits of the concept of body neutrality as mapped onto Black
women’s bodies, I contribute to transdisciplinary conversations around race,
gender, body politics and beauty.
KEYWORDS
body positivity
Black feminism
body politics
aesthetics
body liberation
size