“…Similarly, ideas about, and critical interrogations of, the “disgusting,” “mismanaged,” or “unkempt” body often appear in the feminist literatures (what Joan Chrisler calls “leaks, lumps, and lines,” see Chrisler, 2011). Alongside discussions of the menstruating body (Hyde, Nee, Howlett, Butler, & Drennan, 2011; Mandziuk, 2010), the “leaky” breastfeeding body (Hausman, 2004; Shildrick, 1997; Warren & Brewis, 2004), and the childbirthing body (Carter, 2010; Draper, 2003; Dworkin & Wachs, 2004), conflicts about body hair have become increasingly relevant (Basow & Braman, 1998; Fahs, 2011b; Kenyon & Tiggemann, 1998; Toerien & Wilkinson, 2003). Additionally, theories of modern sexism posit that women often ignore or minimize the extent to which practices constrain and influence women in contemporary society (Swim & Cohen, 1997).…”