Friday 27 March 2015

What is an analysis of Hunger by Roxane Gay?

In Hunger, Roxane Gay uses her past to explain how she used food to cope with trauma and all the ways that coping mechanism affected her life. Gay is able to trace her unhealthy eating habits to a traumatic childhood incident. Along the way, she makes a case for acceptance and loving people as they are without expecting them to change.


Gay is able to drive home the trauma of her gang rape with...

In Hunger, Roxane Gay uses her past to explain how she used food to cope with trauma and all the ways that coping mechanism affected her life. Gay is able to trace her unhealthy eating habits to a traumatic childhood incident. Along the way, she makes a case for acceptance and loving people as they are without expecting them to change.


Gay is able to drive home the trauma of her gang rape with her vivid description. For example, she explains how Christopher—a pseudonym she uses for the friend who brought her to the cabin where it happened—spit in her face after he was done. Though it's wrenching to read, it helps the reader better identify with Gay and empathize with the shame and pain she felt as a 12-year-old Catholic girl who didn't have a good understanding of what exactly was happening.


That shame is internalized because she is unable to speak of the rape for most of her life. Instead, she keeps it to herself and begins to eat for both protection and comfort. As she grows larger, her weight affects her everyday life and her view of herself. She details her interactions with potential partners and her feelings about the choices she makes clearly. This allows readers who have never had an eating disorder to see her life through the lens of her experience.


Gay writes about her life from her birth into a loving family with two brothers to her more recent years as a professor and author. She was not able to love herself for most of her life, she explains. Doing so took a lot of time and required that she set boundaries even with the people she loves. For example, she couldn't visit her family without them policing her food intake. She had to explain to them why that wasn't healthy for their relationship and work with them to improve.


Hunger isn't just about Gay's experience, though. She also discusses the way society views fat people—especially fat women—and how damaging it can be to be dismissed for her size. One story she tells is of her best friend offering her chips before a plane ride; Gay had to refuse, saying that women who look like her can't eat chips in public. Her experiences serve as examples of concepts she seeks to share with her readers. It helps make the consequences of the rejection fat women face clearer. 

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