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Skimmed : Breastfeeding, Race, and Injustice

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Born into a tenant farming family in North Carolina in 1946, Mary Louise, Mary Ann, Mary Alice, and Mary Catherine were medical miracles.

Annie Mae Fultz, a Black-Cherokee woman who lost her ability to hear and speak in childhood, became the mother of America's first surviving set of identical quadruplets.

They were instant celebrities. Their White doctor named them after his own family members.

He sold the rights to use the sisters for marketing purposes to the highest-bidding formula company.

The girls lived in poverty, while Pet Milk's profits from a previously untapped market of Black families skyrocketed. Over half a century later, baby formula is a seventy-billion-dollar industry and Black mothers have the lowest breastfeeding rates in the country.

Since slavery, legal, political, and societal factors have routinely denied Black women the ability to choose how to feed their babies.

In Skimmed, Andrea Freeman tells the riveting story of the Fultz quadruplets while uncovering how feeding America's youngest citizens is awash in social, legal, and cultural inequalities.

This book highlights the making of a modern public health crisis, the four extraordinary girls whose stories encapsulate a nationwide injustice, and how we can fight for a healthier future.

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Product Details
Stanford University Press
1503628965 / 9781503628960
Paperback / softback
11/05/2021
United States
304 pages
152 x 229 mm