WOMANISM + CULTURE

Black Women Don’t Need To Be Thin, And They Don’t Need Your Approval

Body Shaming Lizzo highlights society’s attempts to define femininity through Eurocentric standards

Allison Wiltz
Published in
5 min readAug 18, 2021

--

Photo: Lizzo Music/Vulture

Since Lizzo released her new hit song, Rumors featuring Cardi B, millions of music lovers tuned in; the imagery in their music video brought me right back to the Black women singing The Gospel Truth in Disney’s Hercules movie. Dancing in gold-tinged dresses, they called themselves “goddesses of the arts.” But, unlike many white-washed depictions of the Greeks, this scene celebrated Black women’s bodies in all their glory. In the newly-released Rumors music video, Lizzo and Cardi B resembled modern versions of those archetypal women.

This video hit differently because we rarely see Black women mythologized in a positive light. Lizzo sang, “They don’t know I do it for the culture.” In Rumors, we venture back in time, seeing Black women as powerful as they are beautiful and as free as they are brave.

Sadly, not everyone enjoyed Lizzo’s new music video. And instead of keeping their fat-phobic, racist comments to themselves, they made a conscious decision to bully the Truth-Hurts artist. They want Lizzo to be something she’s not — skinny and soft-spoken…

--

--

Allison Wiltz
ZORA
Writer for

Womanist Scholar bylines @ Momentum, Oprah Daily, ZORA, GEN, EIC of Cultured #WEOC Founder allisonthedailywriter.com https://ko-fi.com/allyfromnola