Marilyn Wann


Marilyn Wann is an American author and an activist in the fat acceptance movement. She lives in San Francisco, California, and identifies herself as a member of a "fat pride" community.

Education

Wann attended Stanford University, earning a bachelor's degree in linguistics and a master's degree in modern thought and literature. As an undergraduate she wrote for The Stanford Daily. About five years after graduation she became an activist after being denied health insurance due to her weight. She began to speak out against weight prejudice and discrimination.

Career

Author

Her magazine Fat!So? was first released in summer of 1994. Her book Fat!So? Because You Don't Have to Apologize for Your Size was published in 1998. She writes about discrimination against fat people in health care, health insurance, and earning potential, and challenges the "anti-fat" mentality of many companies. She writes in her "Fat!so? Manifesto":

...being fat like being short or tall, or black or brown. These are facts of identity that cannot and should not be changed. They are birthright.

Fat activism

She has served on the National Association to Advance Fat Acceptance board; has swum with the Padded Lilies fat synchronized swim team; has performed with Big Moves modern ensemble and its hiphop troupe the Phat Fly Girls; and has done street actions with the Bod Squad fat pride cheerleaders. She is a supporter of Health at Every Size and claims that it is possible to be "fat and fit."
Wann has continued her activism with the creation of the Yay! Scale, speeches at multiple conferences and symposia, and continued involvement with the online "fatosphere" of fat activist bloggers. She has appeared on national media such as ABC,CBS, and CNN.
In 2007, Wann interviewed Leonard Nimoy of Star Trek fame, about his work in photography of nude fat models. She participated in a lecture series given at the University of Oklahoma on "Food, Culture & Society" in November 2007. In addition to her scheduled lecture, Wann taught students how to make Yay! Scales to celebrate weight diversity.