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Who Is Wellness For?

An Examination of Wellness Culture and Who It Leaves Behind

ebook
1 of 1 copy available
1 of 1 copy available

The multi-disciplinary artist and author of Like a Bird and How to Cure a Ghost explores the commodification and appropriation of wellness through the lens of social justice, providing resources to help anyone participate in self-care, regardless of race, identity, socioeconomic status or able-bodiedness.

Growing up in Australia, Fariha Róisín, a Bangladeshi Muslim, struggled to fit in. In attempts to assimilate, she distanced herself from her South Asian heritage and identity. Years later, living in the United States, she realized that the customs, practices, and even food of her native culture that had once made her different—everything from ashwagandha to prayer—were now being homogenized and marketed for good health, often at a premium by white people to white people.

In this thought-provoking book, part memoir, part journalistic investigation, the acclaimed writer and poet explores the way in which the progressive health industry has appropriated and commodified global healing traditions. She reveals how wellness culture has become a luxury good built on the wisdom of Black, brown, and Indigenous people—while ignoring and excluding them.

Who Is Wellness For? is divided into four sections, beginning with The Mind, in which Fariha examines the art of meditation and the importance of intuition. In part two, The Body, she investigates the physiology of trauma, detailing her own journey with fatphobia and gender dysmorphia, as well as her own chronic illness. In part three, Self-Care, she argues against the self-care industrial complex but cautious us against abandoning care completely and offers practical advice. She ends with Justice, arguing that if we truly want to be well, we must be invested in everyone's well being and shift toward nurturance culture.

Deeply intimate and revelatory, Who Is Wellness For? forces us to confront the imbalance in health and healing and carves a path towards self-care that is inclusionary for all.

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    • Library Journal

      January 1, 2022

      Canadian-born, Australian-raised, Brooklyn-based, and self-identified as a Muslim queer Bangladeshi, accomplished poet/novelist Roisin (Like a Bird) considers how the wellness industry commodifies things associated with her South Asian heritage, from food to customs to prayer, primarily for the benefit of white people. In the end, the Black, Brown and Indigenous peoples on whose culture wellness is built are essentially excluded. With a 50,000-copy first printing.

      Copyright 2022 Library Journal, LLC Used with permission.

    • Publisher's Weekly

      Starred review from March 28, 2022
      In this blistering blend of memoir and cultural criticism, novelist Róisín (Like a Bird) traces her path to healing as an abuse survivor and takes an unsparing look at the appropriation and corruption of Eastern spiritual practices for Western audiences. Róisín’s childhood was marred by her mother’s unpredictable and violent behavior, and as an adult, those painful memories long went unprocessed. Her healing process, she writes, involved understanding intergenerational trauma and recognizing how it has a physical effect on one’s body, and how interconnected the mind and the body are. Alongside her personal story, Róisín explains how the “wellness industrial complex” works as “a modern arm of imperialism” as “whiteness and capital have... relegat caring for oneself as a privilege.” Meditation, for instane, has been “divorce... from its spiritual roots,” and while “meditation came from my people,” she writes, she learned about it “through white people’s interpretation.” Ultimately, Róisín’s answer to the question her title poses is that “wellness isn’t for anyone if it isn’t for everyone,” and through vivid writing and striking curiosity, she makes a solid case for making it so. This profoundly enriching survey nails it. Agent: Monika Woods, Triangle House.

    • Kirkus

      May 1, 2022
      An exploration of the ways in which the wellness industry simultaneously commoditizes non-White cultures and renders services inaccessible to marginalized peoples. R�is�n, a freelance writer who was raised Muslim by Bengali parents in Australia, frames the book with the question: "If [wellness] was for someone like me, pilfered from my very own culture, then why couldn't I afford it?" Seeking to answer this question and others, the author divides the narrative into four sections--mind, body, self-care, and justice--each of which weaves a specific aspect of health care in with R�is�n's personal experiences. In the section on the mind, for example, the author interrogates how her abusive mother's lack of access to therapy passed on intergenerational mental trauma. During her healing process, R�is�n began practicing meditation, which she later found out had been divorced from its ancient Indian roots to make it more palatable to Western nations and easier to commodify in a capitalist society. In the section on the body, the author explores how her history as a survivor of sexual abuse instilled in her the harmful belief that her body was not actually her own. She then documents how a massage therapist who had previously helped her gain relief from the physical manifestations of abuse on her muscles violated her trust by callously discussing a highly publicized incest case in a moment when the author sought refuge from the triggering news cycles. Ultimately, R�is�n calls for a more sustainable, equitable approach to healing. Only occasionally dense, the author's prose is engaging, and she delves into her past with vulnerability and self-compassion. The book is deeply researched and laudably includes the work of a variety of Black and Indigenous scholars to make a unique and relevant case for the need for greater accessibility to healing. A vulnerable, intensely trenchant analysis of the ways capitalism denies wellness for so many around the world.

      COPYRIGHT(2022) Kirkus Reviews, ALL RIGHTS RESERVED.

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