Ethnic studies / Ethnicity Books
Duke University Press Suspicion
Book SynopsisNicole Charles frames the refusal of Afro-Barbadians to immunize their daughters with the HPV vaccine as suspicion, showing that this suspicion is based in concrete histories of government mistrust and coercive medical practices on colonized peoples.Trade Review“Suspicion is a compellingly written and superlatively theorized ethnography of public health, affect, and the persistence of racism in the Caribbean. Nicole Charles uses suspicion to understand the logic behind Black parents' decisions about whether to give their children vaccines, showing that their decisions are rooted not in ignorance and irrationality but within long histories of racial and sexual injury as well as hierarchies related to race, class, color, education, and authority. This is quite simply a remarkable book.” -- Deborah A. Thomas, author of * Political Life in the Wake of the Plantation: Sovereignty, Witnessing, Repair *“In this empirically rich account of HPV vaccine promotion and refusal in Barbados, Nicole Charles depathologizes and unsettles conventional understandings of vaccine hesitancy through the urgent conceptual framework of suspicion. Deeply informed by and contributing to plural interdisciplinary conversations in Black feminisms, transnational gender studies, science and technology studies, and the history and anthropology of the Caribbean, Charles listens closely to insightful interlocutors in Barbados to illuminate the embodied affective intensity of contemporary vaccine politics.” -- Anne Pollock, author of * Synthesizing Hope: Matter, Knowledge, and Place in South African Drug Discovery *"Charles provides us with a thoroughly researched examination of an important subject at a time when such research is urgently needed in the face of a deadly pandemic. She shows us that parents in Barbados are motivated by genuine fears regarding the health of their children, and reasonable suspicion about the motivations of the state, and of vaccine manufacturers. That is significant for understanding how black Caribbean people evaluate technologies that affect health." -- F.S.J. Ledgister * Caribbean Quarterly *"This interesting, theoretically engaging book explores vaccine hesitancy among adolescents and young women in the English-speaking Caribbean nation of Barbados. Feminist scholars, medical anthropologists, and health-care professionals in the Caribbean and other postcolonial settings will benefit greatly from exposure to the ideas outlined in this book. Highly recommended. Lower- and upper-division undergraduates. Graduate students, faculty, and professionals. General readers." -- F. H. Smith * Choice *“Suspicion is a richly documented and theoretically ambitious ethnography of HPV vaccination hesitancy in Barbados. . . . Charles persuasively shows that Barbadians’ suspicion toward the HPV vaccination should be taken seriously, as it constitutes a productive tool for social and cultural analysis. . . . [Suspicion] is a theoretically sophisticated book that charts new territory within the literature.” -- Cristina A. Pop * Gender & Society *“This remarkable book . . . makes an important contribution to international scholarship on vaccine hesitancy, linking personal and familial decision-making in Barbados with transnational economic trends, national health and economic policies, and local embodied experiences of postcoloniality. . . . Suspicion offers a necessary correction to current received wisdom about some people’s deeply felt discomfort about vaccines, which inevitably links vaccine hesitancy with irrationality and misinformation.” -- Bernice L. Hausman * Journal of Medical Humanities *“Although numerous studies have been undertaken on vaccine confidence and its social regulators, there has rarely been a work published in this area that provides such depth of feeling to the voiced concerns of a specific community. . . . The result is a beautifully rich understanding of the complexity of human decision-making and a recognition that, at least in the case of Afro-Barbadians, ‘suspicion’ is a far more apt description of collective vaccine response than ‘hesitancy.’” -- Paula Larsson * H-Sci-Med-Tech, H-Net Reviews *Table of ContentsAcknowledgments ix Suspicion: An Introduction 1 1. Circles of Suspicion 24 2. Risk and Suspicion: An Archive of Surveillance and Racialized Biopolitics in Barbados 45 3. (Hyper)Sexuality, Respectability, and the Language of Suspicion 66 4. Care, Embodiment, and Sensed Protection 94 5. Suspicion and Certainty 115 Conclusion: Toward Radical Care 148 Notes 155 Bibliography 175 Index 191
£70.55
Duke University Press Black Trans Feminism
Book SynopsisIn Black Trans Feminism Marquis Bey offers a meditation on blackness and gender nonnormativity in ways that recalibrate traditional understandings of each. Theorizing black trans feminism from the vantages of abolition and gender radicality, Bey articulates blackness as a mutiny against racializing categorizations; transness as a nonpredetermined, wayward, and deregulated movement that works toward gender’s destruction; and black feminism as an epistemological method to fracture hegemonic modes of racialized gender. In readings of the essays, interviews, and poems of Alexis Pauline Gumbs, jayy dodd, and Venus Di’Khadijah Selenite, Bey turns black trans feminism away from a politics of gendered embodiment and toward a conception of it as a politics grounded in fugitivity and the subversion of power. Together, blackness and transness actualize themselves as on the run from gender. In this way, Bey presents black trans feminism as a mode of enacting the wholesale dismanTrade Review“In Marquis Bey's deeply creative and fiercely imaginative book, Black trans feminism describes a kind of worldly inhabitation and a radical form of theorizing power and refusal in ways that are not contingent on identity. In Bey's hands, Black trans feminism becomes a powerful call for vulnerability, fugitive hope, abolition, and freedom. Black Trans Feminism allows us to gesture to all that we want from this world but do not yet know how to name.” -- Jennifer C. Nash, author of * Birthing Black Mothers *“In its deep engagements with the three movements of its title, Black Trans Feminism is a very exciting book to read, digest, and think through. Marquis Bey’s focus on fugitivity and the elastic category of the fugitive stealing themself back is a highly salient and timely conceptual offering, and I’m astonished by the clarity, precision, and deep-digging that Bey brings to the material. Those working at the interstices of Black trans feminism need this gift of manifest lucidity to reference, teach, and expound on.” -- Eliza Steinbock, author of * Shimmering Images: Trans Cinema, Embodiment, and the Aesthetics of Change *“Black Trans Feminism constitutes an incisive critique and interrogation of the very grammars of gender normativity. . . . With this project, he attempts to reconfigure how we understand kinship, blackness, transness and Black feminism in order to establish a coalition that can be understood as a broadening of kinship network relationalities, affinities and affiliations.” -- Marietta Kosma * European Journal of American Culture *"Bey’s work is an important contribution to the conversations surrounding race, transgender identity, and feminist praxis, providing a hopeful mode for reimagining our world and ourselves. . . . Recommended. Advanced undergraduates through faculty." -- D. E. Magill * Choice *“Black Trans Feminism is a deep philosophical and literary exploration of Black trans feminism. . . . The book offers critical and imaginative visions of gender radical and abolitionist futures. Bey tell us how we can possibly get there with a sense of hope that is so rare in academic writing.” -- Nishant Upadhyay * American Quarterly *Table of ContentsAcknowledgments ix Introduction: Abolition, Gender Radicality 1 Part 1 1. Black, Trans, Feminism 37 2. Fugitivity, Un/gendered 66 3. Trans/figurative, Blackness 88 Part 2 4. Feminist, Fugitivity 115 5. Questioned, Gendered 145 6. Trigger, Rebel 175 Conclusion: Hope, Fugitive 199 Notes 229 Bibliography 263 Index 283
£75.65
Duke University Press Sissy Insurgencies
Book SynopsisMarlon B. Ross explores the figure of the sissy as central to how Americans have imagined, articulated, and negotiated black masculinity from the 1880s to the present.Trade Review“In this remarkable work of African American intellectual history, Marlon B. Ross refuses to allow the sloppy modes of thought that have us tripping over the distinction between gender conduct and sexual orientation. He is vigilant about the matter of maintaining a distinction between the sissy and the homosexual. This long-overdue study will have a very large impact on queer studies, masculinity studies, and African American studies.” -- Robert F. Reid-Pharr, author of * Archives of Flesh: African America, Spain, and Post-humanist Critique *“Sissy Insurgencies is a model of careful historical and literary analysis from a scholar who has made an indelible mark on masculinity studies, black studies, and queer of color critique. Ambitious and far reaching in scope, this book is a stunning work of sissy insurgent genius.” -- C. Riley Snorton, author of * Black on Both Sides: A Racial History of Trans Identity *"Including considerations of and references to works by Richard Wright, Langston Hughes, and Amiri Baraka, among others, Sissy Insurgencies is as much a provocative literary study of African-American fiction and autobiography as it is an examination of the role of the sissy in Black and mainstream American culture." -- Reginald Harris * Gay and Lesbian Review *Table of ContentsPreamble. Sissies Everywhere ix 1. Can the Sissy Be Insurgent? 1 2. Sissy Housekeeping: Cleanliness, Gender Dissonance, and the Spoils of Political Patronage at Washington's Tuskegee 51 3. Un/fit Manliness: Evading Masculine Brutality in James Weldon Johnson's Sissy Narratives 111 4. Baldwin's Sissy Heroics 165 5. Sissy but Not Gay: Anatomy of the Post-Civil Rights Straight Black Sissy 233 6. Gay but Not Sissy: Race and the Queering of the Professional Athlete 283 Postscript. Whatever Happened or Will Happen to the Sissy-Boy? 343 Notes 349 Bibliography 403 Index 433
£89.10
Duke University Press The Florida Room
Book SynopsisAlexandra T. Vazquez listens to the music and history of Miami to explore the city's sonic cultures and its material and social realities.Trade Review“Alexandra T. Vazquez’s bold, brilliant, and refreshingly unconventional meditation on sonic placemaking in Florida is fearless and groundbreaking. Compressing the deep, wide, and volatile politics and poetics of the global South into a focused exploration of the “Sunshine State,” The Florida Room reminds readers of what daring, innovative, and challenging theory looks and sounds like. This luminous book opens up our notions of what counts as theory as well as who gets identified as theorists.” -- Daphne A. Brooks, author of * Liner Notes for the Revolution: The Intellectual Life of Black Feminist Sound *“Not only does The Florida Room come to us at just the right time in the history of Miami cultures, it arrives from a scholar who is a great interpreter of the interplay between music, performance, and the social. Alexandra T. Vazquez amasses an archive of fascinating materials, listens to them in every sense for what they say about themselves and that which circulates around them, and accounts for that creativity and thought in prose that is virtuosic and open to surprises. This singular book is a true gift.” -- Antonio López, author of * Unbecoming Blackness: The Diaspora Cultures of Afro-Cuban America *"As Vazquez identifies unexpected resonances and collaborations—snaking her way through singer Betty Wright, the Indigenous rock group Tiger Tiger, and Miami bass’s Luke Skyywalker Records—her prose is lively and darting, as if refusing to let a central narrative congeal. It's a loving and rich account of somewhere that exists both in real life and the imagination, too abundant to be contained." -- Cat Zhang * PItchfork, Best Music Books of 2022 *Table of ContentsPreface. Head for the Beach ix 1. The Florida Room 1 2. Miami from the Spoils 46 3. Drums Take Time 81 4. Bass is the Place 117 Afterword 156 Acknowledgments 159 Notes 165 Bibliography 203 Index 215
£72.25
Duke University Press Scales of Captivity
Book SynopsisMary Pat Brady traces the figure of the captive and cast-off child over 150 years of Latinx/Chicanx literature as a critique of colonial modernity and the forms of confinement that underpin racialized citizenship.Trade Review“With its equally lyrical and incisive political commentary, Scales of Captivity rigorously explores how the (re)production of the US settler colonial racial state depends upon both a monopoly on violence and a monopoly on movement. It makes a crucial, timely, and pathbreaking intervention into literary and cultural studies, immigration studies, political geography, and ethnic, gender, and sexuality studies.” -- Kirstie A. Dorr, author of * On Site, In Sound: Performance Geographies in América Latina *“Mary Pat Brady has written a multilayered, bracing study with deep historical roots and startling contemporary resonance. She reanimates questions of citizenship and exclusion at the heart of Chicanx/Latinx studies, while simultaneously uncovering the inextricability of childhood, queer politics, and acts of witnessing. Brilliantly argued and compellingly written, this stellar work is the guidebook we desperately need to make sense of endlessly shifting borders and boundaries.” -- Richard T. Rodríguez, author of * Next of Kin: The Family in Chicano/a Cultural Politics *“As ambitious as it is thorough, Scales of Captivity scours over 150 years of philosophical, political, and literary history, supplying the reader with fascinating and pertinent insights into the creation and maintenance of the complex racial/social hierarchies that currently exist throughout the US-Mexican border complex. . . . The counter-theories that Brady offers to combat these systems of oppression are even more provocative, making it a must read for anyone seriously interested in border issues.” -- Chandler R. Thompson * Arizona Journal of Hispanic Cultural Studies *"Scholars of western American literature will find in Scales of Captivity a historically aware sketch of 175 years of the central role of capture in building Spanish/Mexican/US sovereignty in the West, as well as nuanced close readings of a broad selection of Latine cultural production situated in the region—which, Brady’s analyses remind us, has always been many regions." -- Sarah J. Ropp * Western American Literature *Table of ContentsAcknowledgments ix Introduction. The Scalar Lien 1 1. Captivating Ties: On Children without Childhoods 37 2. Plausible Deniability: Pursuing the Traces of Captivity 79 3. Submerged Captivities: Moving toward Queer Horizontality 119 4. N + 1: Sex and the Hypervisible (Invisible) Migrant 153 5. Misplaced: Peopling a Deportation Imaginary 197 Conclusion. Density's Resistance to Scale 239 Notes 249 Bibliography 275 Index 293
£75.65
Duke University Press Work Requirements
Book SynopsisTodd Carmody explores how the idea that work is inherently meaningful was reinforced and tasked to those who lived on the margins and needed assistance during nineteenth-century America.Trade Review"Work Requirements is a creative, persuasive, and well-crafted analysis of the representational labor undergirding our “work society”. It is essential reading for anyone seeking to contest this mode of social organization." -- Karen M. Tani * International Journal of Social History *Table of ContentsIntroduction. Signs Taken for Work 1 1. The Pensioner’s Claim 33 2. The Beggar’s Case 74 3. The Work of the Image 119 4. Institutional Rhythms 172 Coda. Remaking Reciprocity 214 Acknowledgments 221 Notes 225 Bibliography 289 Index 315
£73.95
Duke University Press Subversive Habits
Book SynopsisShannen Dee Williams provides a comprehensive history of Black Catholic nuns in the United States, tracing how Black sisters’ struggles were central to the long African American freedom movement.Trade Review“Deeply researched, elegantly written, and boldly argued, Subversive Habits is a brilliant excavation of the long political history of Black nuns. This is extraordinary scholarship that is as accessible as it is groundbreaking and illuminating. This timely and essential book widens the frames of Black women’s history, of religion and activism, and of Black Catholicism.” -- Barbara D. Savage, author of * Your Spirits Walk beside Us: The Politics of Black Religion *“Sweeping in its scope, exhaustively researched, and balanced in presentation,Subversive Habits is a seminal history of Black Catholic Nuns and their struggle for equality and justice in the Catholic Church.” -- Bettye Collier-Thomas, author of * Jesus, Jobs, and Justice: African American Women and Religion *"An awe-inspiring history book about Black nuns who fought for freedom and equality. . . . Subversive Habits is a stirring history text about the remarkable faith and conviction of Black nuns in America." -- Melissa Wuske * Foreword *(Starred Review) "Informative and often surprising, this should be required reading for scholars of Catholic and African American religious history and will undoubtedly become the standard text on its subject." * Publishers Weekly *"The 'uncommon faithfulness' of the nuns in Subversive Habits—taking the church at its word when it teaches that we are all one body—is a model of discipleship from which all Catholics can learn." -- Kathleen Manning * U.S. Catholic *"Shannen Williams's book chronicles the bold steps and persistence African-American sisters took to debunk their rejection by white orders that insisted Black women lacked souls and/or virtue suitable to be admitted to them. . . . This outstanding book, Subversive Habits, is well-researched, quite revealing and a set of history and reality lessons of how Black sisters kept the faith and made the Catholic Church change." -- Ralph E. Moore, Jr. * The AFRO *"This eye-opening, inspiring and thoroughly researched book unearths a history that few Americans know: the challenges and triumphs of Black Catholic nuns in the United States. It’s one of the most exciting new books in Black women’s history and powerfully captures the interconnections between race, religion and politics." -- Keisha Blain * Politico *"Subversive Habits demands a committed reader. However, it will reward the resilient and open-minded reader with apokalupsis—tremendous learning about the scope of racism throughout the American Catholic Church as well as the witness of these Black Catholic women and their contributions to the church and the world. Please take up the reading and stick with it. Draw some perseverance from the women the book depicts and take heart in their commitment to justice." -- Kevin Spinale * America *"Subversive Habits brings a very necessary balance to histories published in recent decades that focus on civil rights work by Catholics. It seems these historians were writing about the exception and not the norm. This is the story of courageous nuns, including those who felt they couldn't remain any longer, who are the true gems of American Catholic history. Every woman religious must read this book." -- Laura Swan * Magistra *"In Subversive Habits, historian Williams has given us a remarkable work of scholarship, one that may be distressing for many readers because she clears away any shred of doubt about the U.S. Catholic Church being racist from its very beginnings." -- Kathleen Finley * The Tablet *"I have never read a more thoughtful account of the Black Catholic experience than Shannen Dee Williams’ Subversive Habits. Williams’ book is a revelatory history of the experiences of Black religious women in understanding race, faith, and change in the Catholic church from the antebellum period through the various waves of civil-rights struggle to the contemporary era." -- Marcia Chatelain * Chronicle of Higher Education * "Williams seeks to tell the story of these women and of the Black and majority white sisterhoods in which they participated. The account is well documented, and Williams includes a look at the current departures of Black sisters from religious life and considers the likely future of Black female religious communities. Recommended. Graduate students, researchers, faculty, and professionals." -- L. H. Hoyle * Choice *"Williams's book is the go-to work on Black women religious in the United States during and in the afterlife of slavery. Future scholars, practitioners, and interlocutors are indebted to this brilliant author for the treasure trove she has gifted us." -- Ahmad Greene-Hayes * Journal of Southern History *Table of ContentsAbbreviations ix Note on Terminology xiii Preface: Bearing Witness to a Silenced Past xv Acknowledgments xix Introduction. America’s Forgotten Black Freedom Fighters 1 1. Our Sole Wish Is to Do the Will of God: The Early Struggles of Black Catholic Sisters in the United States 23 2. Nothing Is Too Good for the Youth of Our Race: The Fight for Black-Administered Catholic Education during Jim Crow 61 3. Is the Order Catholic Enough? The Struggle to Desegregate White Sisterhoods after World War II 103 4. I Was Fired Up to Go to Selma: Black Sisters, the Second Vatican Council, and the Fight for Civil Rights 134 5. Liberation Is Our First Priority: Black Nuns and Black Power 167 6. No Schools, No Churches! The Fight to Save Black Catholic Education in the 1970s 200 7. The Future of the Black Catholic Nun Is Dubious: African American Sisters in the Age of Church Decline 231 Conclusion. The Catholic Church Wouldn't Be Catholic If It Wasn’t for Us 259 Glossary 271 Notes 273 Bibliography 345 Index 371
£85.50
Duke University Press Consuelo Jimenez Underwood
Book SynopsisThe contributors to this volume examine the artistic practice of Consuelo Jimenez Underwood, whose innovative art and urgent engagement with a range of pressing contemporary issues mark her as one of the most vital artists of our time.Trade Review"With the publication of the important book . . . art lovers are treated to a full account of the life, creative processes, vision, and accomplishments of a great Latina artist. . . . The editors . . . have greatly enhanced our knowledge of an important American artist of craft and fine arts." -- Ricardo Romo * Latinos in America *"It is a joy to see Jimenez Underwood’s work as a teacher addressed and to read about her influence on students. Essays are supported by excellent images and a strong introduction. A significant notes section points to additional research. This excellent resource will be good for courses that expand on the understandings of textile art and art history. Recommended. Upper-division undergraduates through faculty; professionals." -- L. L. Kriner * Choice *Table of ContentsList of Illustrations xi Preface. The Art of Necessity / Luis Valdez xv Acknowledgments xvii Introduction / Laura E. Pérez and Ann Marie Leimer 1 I. Spinning—Making Thread 1. The Hands of Consuelo Jimenez Underwood: A Filmmaker's Reflections / Carol Sauvion 25 2. Charged Objects: The Multivalent Fiber Art of Consuelo Jimenez Underwood / Christine Laffer 35 II. Weaving—Hand Work 3. History/Whose-Story? Postcoloniality and Contemporary Chicana Art / Constance Cortez 53 4. A Tear in the Curtain: Hilos y Cultura in the Art of Consuelo Jimenez Underwood / Amalia Mesa-Bains 71 5. Prayers for the Planet: Reweaving the Natural and the Social—Consuelo Jimenez Underwood's Welcome to Flower-Landia / Laura E. Pérez 80 6. Consuelo Jimenez Underwood: Welcome to Flower-Landia / María Ester Fernández 91 7. Between the Lines: Documenting Consuelo Jimenez Underwood's Fiber Pathways / Emily Zaiden 100 8. Flags, the Sacred, and a Different America in Consuelo Jimenez Underwood's Fiber Art / Clara Román-Odio 111 9. Garments for the Goddess of the Américas: The American Dress Triptych / Ann Marie Leimer 123 10. Space, Place, and Belonging in Borderlines: Countermapping in the Art of Consuelo Jimenez Underwood / Karen Mary Davalos 142 11. Decolonizing Aesthetics in Mexican and Xicana Fiber Art: The Art of Consuelo Jimenez Underwood and Georgina Santos / Cristina Serna 161 12. Reading Our Mothers: Decolonization and Cultural Identity in Consuelo Jimenez Underwood's Rebozos for Our Mothers / Carmen Febles 181 13. Weaving Water: Toward an Indigenous Method of Self- and Community Care / Jenell Navarro 198 III. Off the Loom—Into the World 14. Consuelo Jimenez Underwood: Artist, Educator, and Advocate / Robert Milnes 221 15. Being Chicanx Studies: Lessons for Racial Justice from the Work and Life of Consuelo Jimenez Underwood / Marcus Pizarro 239 16. Blue Río Tapestries / Verónica Reyes 244 Notes 261 Bibliography 290 Contributors 304 Index 311
£80.75
Duke University Press The Pandemic Divide
Book SynopsisThe contributors to The Pandemic Divide analyze and explain the myriad racial disparities that came to the forefront of the COVID-19 pandemic while highlighting what steps could have been taken to mitigate its impact.Trade Review"Required, essential reading for Americans trying to reconcile their pandemic experiences." (starred review) -- Tina Panik * Library Journal *"The Pandemic Divide should appeal to anyone with an interest in social and cultural politics, and moreover policy. In a world that is continually racialised and then derided for being so, this book is an urgent reminder of how deep rooted systems operate in sinister ways to continually exploit, undermine, and undervalue whole swathes of the population." -- Georgia Bisbas * Lancet Infections Diseases *"Disturbing but proactive...." -- Andrew Robinson * Nature *"Wright, Hubbard, and Darity offer compelling sociological, economic, and epidemiological data to show that that structural racism has undeniable consequences on the health and mortality of racial and ethnic minorities. The Pandemic Divide is a useful text for students, educators, and researchers to understand why the COVID-19 pandemic impacted certain populations more than others." -- Gwenetta Curry * Ethnic and Racial Studies *Table of ContentsA Note on Terminology ix Foreword / Mary T. Bassett xi Introduction. Six Feet and Miles Apart: Structural Racism in the United States and Racially Disparate Outcomes during the COVID-19 Pandemic / Lucas Hubbard, Gwendolyn L. Wright, and William A. Darity Jr. 1 Section I: COVID-19 in Context 1. How Systemic Racism and Preexisting Conditions Contributed to COVID-19 Disparities for Black Americans / Keisha L. Bentley-Edwards, Melissa J. Scott, and Paul A. Robbins 29 2. Labor History and Pandemic Response: The Overlapping Experiences of Work, Housing, and Neighborhood Conditions / Joe William Trotter Jr. 46 Section II: COVID-19 and Institutions 3. “God Is in Control”: Race, Religion, Family, and Community during the COVID-19 Pandemic / Sandra L. Barnes 69 4. COVID-19, Race, and Mass Incarceration / Arvind Krishnamurthy 87 Section III: COVID-19 and Financial Disparities 5. Housing, Student Debt, and Labor Market Inequality: COVID-19, Black Families/Households, and Financial Insecurity / Fenaba R. Addo and Adam Hollowell 111 6. Race, Entrepreneurship, and COVID-19: Black Small-Business Survival in Prepandemic and Postpandemic America / Henry Clay McKoy Jr. 129 7. COVID-19 Effects on Black Business-Owner Households / Chris Wheat, Fiona Greig,and Damon Jones 186 8. Closing Racial Economic Gaps during and after COVID-19 / Jane Dokko and Jung Sakong 210 Section IV: COVID-19 and Educational Disparities 9. Latinx Immigrant Parents and Their Children in Times of COVID-19: Facing Inequities Together in the “Mexican Room” of the New Latino South / Marta Sánchez, Melania DiPietro, Leslie Babinski, Steve Amendum, and Steven Knotek 231 10. COVID-19, Higher Education, and Social Inequality / Adam Hollowell and N. Joyce Payne 256 11. The Rebirth of K-12 Public Education: Postpandemic Opportunities / Kristen R. Stephens, Kisha N. Daniels, and Erica R. Phillips 276 Postscript: COVID-19 and the Path Forward / Eugene T. Richardson 295 Contributors 301 Index 307
£73.95
Duke University Press Panama in Black
Book SynopsisKaysha Corinealdi traces the multigenerational activism of Afro-Caribbean Panamanians as they forged diasporic communities in Panama and the United States throughout the twentieth century.Trade Review"A widely appealing and valuable addition to diaspora studies, Central American and Caribbean historiography, and scholarly understandings of how individuals and groups navigate belonging in and beyond the nation." -- Elizabeth Manley * The Americas *"Panama in Black uncovers the complexities of Afro-Caribbean Panamanian identity across class, gender, and generational lines. Corinealdi’s account of Afro-diasporic world making reveals an ongoing practice in which Afro-Caribbean migrants shaped ideas of citizenship on the isthmus and throughout the Americas. As a result, this book is essential reading for those interested in the history of Caribbean migrations, the African diaspora, the Canal Zone, Panamanian nation formation, and citizenship in Latin America." -- Takkara Brunson * H-Caribbean *"Panama in Black demonstrates some of the reasons researchers, including myself, were drawn to these immigrants and their descendants. . . . I salute Kaysha Corinealdi for this latest addition to the bookshelf and look forward to more." -- Michael Conniff * ReVista *Table of ContentsList of Abbreviations ix Acknowledgments xi Introduction. Legacies of Exclusion and Afro-Caribbean Diasporic World Making 1 1. Panama as Diaspora: Documenting Afro-Caribbean Panamanian Histories, 1928–1936 29 2. Activist Formations: Fighting for Citizenship Rights and Forging Afro-Diasporic Alliances, 1940–1950 57 3. Todo por la Patria: Diplomacy, Anticommunism, and the Rhetoric of Assimilation, 1950–1954 93 4. To Be Panamanian: The Canal Zone, Nationalist Sacrifices, and the Price of Citizenship, 1954–1961 122 5. Panama in New York: Las Servidoras and Engendering an Educated Black Diaspora, 1953–1970 150 Conclusion. Afro-Caribbean Panamanians and the Future of Diasporic World Making 180 Notes 195 Bibliography 233 Index 253
£70.55
Duke University Press A Kiss across the Ocean
Book SynopsisMelding memoir with cultural criticism, Richard T. Rodríguez examines the relationship between British post-punk musicians like Siouxsie and the Banshees, Adam Ant, and Pet Shop Boys and their Latinx audiences in the United States since the 1980s.Trade Review"This at-once scholarly and personal book is a moving tribute to the escapism and comfort that music can give to the most marginalized members of society: Rodríguez provides well-researched analysis of the influences on and of post-punk bands, in realms from racial politics to ethnic cultural dynamics, and also writes of his own experiences as a young fan searching for belonging. Rodríguez’s book successfully balances an intellectual understanding of the cultural ramifications of post-punk music with poignant and alluring background stories, appealing to scholars and fans alike." -- Lisa Henry * Library Journal *"In this part-memoir, part-ethnography of England and SoCal in the 1980s, author Rodríguez, a professor of media and cultural studies and English at UC Riverside, investigates what binds these two seemingly disparate cultures. Starting with his own tween-age fandom of Boy George and the Culture Club, Rodríguez plumbs the depths of the passionate, sometimes tainted love affair between British post-punks and the Latinos who worship at their altar." -- Suzy Exposito * Los Angeles Times *"Extremely well written and researched the book is a fantastic exploration into the wider reaches of UK post-punk and compulsive reading for those with an interest in subculture studies and the post-punk scene itself." -- Lee Powell * Vive Le Rock *"Rodríguez could’ve easily ripped into a press corps that still largely thinks Latinos only listen to Spanish-language music backed by either accordions or congas. He does critique them but limits the bile in favor of a warm, poignant memoir-analysis, which he writes is 'animated by a deep investigative labor propelled by fannish investment.'" -- GustavoArellano * Los Angeles Times *"An intriguing study of how music builds connections between different communities, and how pop desire translates over time and space." -- Rob Sheffield * Rolling Stone *"Ultimately, Rodriguez’s book is a tribute to the music that not only provided a soundtrack to his teenage years but also enabled him to navigate his way through the thorny questions of identity." -- Gilbert Garcia * San Antonio Express-News *"Tender, wry, delicate, and rich, A Kiss across the Ocean is a love letter to the theatrically potent musical and visual gestures of the artists and bands of the British postpunk scene that made a difference in the mid-1980s and continue to do so today, even when people may have forgotten some of the bands’ names." -- Caridad Svich * Theatre Survey *"In seven short chapters, the author’s intertwining of autobiography and a deeply researched history is a winning approach for articulating the equally intertwined friendships, influence and politics of British post-punk and Latin American cultures." -- Maria Elena Buszek * Punk & Post-Punk *"The book is valuable in furthering a grasp of the deeply nuanced cultural hybridity, orientation and style sensibilities that have informed U.S. Latinx life from its very beginnings, and how this community has in turn been pivotal in determining artistic output beyond our borders and into the mainstream. . . . , Rodriguez opens up vistas from personal experience and lifelong research to chart dizzying connections across fandom, fantasy and friendships, showing influences from Latinos on both U.S. coasts on recording artists who received and processed Latinx culture in tandem with their trans-Atlantic careers." -- Benjamin Ortiz * New Lines Magazine *Table of ContentsAcknowledgments ix A Kiss Across the Ocean: An Introduction 1 1. Red over White 27 2. Touching Prince Charming 48 3. Darker Entries 67 4. The Shining Sinners 85 5. Zoot Suits and Secondhand Knowledge 104 6. Mexican Americanos 128 7. Latin/o American Party 147 Conclusion. Dedicated to the One I Love 164 Notes 175 References 207 Index 231
£70.55
Duke University Press Violent Utopia
Book SynopsisJovan Scott Lewis retells the history and afterlife of the 1921 Tulsa race massacre and its century-long legacy of dispossession, placing it in a larger historical and social context of widespread anti-Black racism and segregation in Tulsa and beyond.Trade Review"Violent Utopia’s findings shed a searching light on Oklahoman history but are not limited to or by it. Whilst humble enough to only define itself as a ‘minor contribution’ to the reparations movement, Violent Utopia’s great strength is an analytical dexterity that studiously balances the dialectical dance of anti-Black violence and Black freedom dreams." -- Thomas Cryer * LSE Review of Books *“This thought-provoking book is worth reading. It shows that much can be learned from studying Black communities from a critical race perspective.” -- Robert L. Boyd * Ethnic and Racial Studies *"Skillfully incorporates the tools of geography, ethnography, and history to investigate issues surrounding reparations and what they might accomplish for the African American community. . . . Highly recommended. Graduate students, faculty, and professionals." * Choice *"Lewis's Violent Utopia offers a fresh and nuanced perspective on the 1921 Tulsa Race Massacre and its legacies. ... The book is a stellar ethnohistorical model for scholars." -- Jajuan Johnson * Journal of Southern History *Table of ContentsAcknowledgments ix Introduction 1 1. Violence 21 2. Inheritance 55 3. Restoration 93 4. Repair 131 5. Territory 174 Conclusion 210 Notes 223 Bibliography 239 Index 251
£74.70
Duke University Press Feels Right
Book SynopsisIn Feels Right Kemi Adeyemi presents an ethnography of how black queer women in Chicago use dance to assert their physical and affective rights to the city. Adeyemi stages the book in queer dance parties in gentrifying neighborhoods, where good feelings are good business. But feeling good is elusive for black queer women whose nightlives are undercut by white people, heterosexuality, neoliberal capitalism, burnout, and other buzzkills. Adeyemi documents how black queer women respond to these conditions: how they destroy DJ booths, argue with one another, dance slowly, and stop partying altogether. Their practices complicate our expectations that life at night, on the queer dance floor, or among black queer community simply feels good. Adeyemi’s framework of “feeling right” instead offers a closer, kinesthetic look at how black queer women adroitly manage feeling itself as a complex right they should be afforded in cities that violently structure their movementsTrade Review“Adeyemi’s rich ethnographic observations on Black queer women’s parties in Chicago demonstrate why the dance floor is much more than just a utopian promise of happiness within a hostile socio-political environment. . . . Through dancing and choreography, queerness is not only performed but also learned and experienced by people who may not have encountered it before.” -- Yener Bayramoglu * Ethnic and Racial Studies *"What is innovative about Adeyemi’s text ... is that she carves out a scholarly field that reflects her interest in queer nightlife in the most expansive definition of the phrase. ... Feels Right is a political project that aims to drive many Black queer women to return to nightlife even if their pleasure is contested on the dance floor and in the city." -- Marietta Kosma * European Journal of American Studies *Table of ContentsPreface ix Acknowledgments xiii Introduction 1 1. Slo ‘Mo and the Pace of Black Queer Life 39 2. Where’s the Joy in Accountability? Black Joy at Its Limits 62 3. Ordinary E N E R G Y 96 Conclusion: An Oral History of the Future of Burnout 120 Notes 143 Bibliography 159 Index 171
£71.10
Duke University Press Breaks in the Air
Book SynopsisJohn Klaess tells the story of rap’s emergence on New York City’s airwaves by examining how artists and broadcasters adapted hip hop’s performance culture to radio.Trade Review"Not to be missed, musicologist Klaess has written a fascinating chronicle of hip-hop radio stations. . . . Klaess’s book is a must-read for all those interested in tracing hip-hop’s sociopolitical/racial chord back to its airwaves origins." -- Alessandro Cimino * Library Journal *"This is a book about radio as a medium, not the music that flows through it, and it deserves praise for shining a light on the people behind the tapes who have been underappreciated by more conventional histories." -- Peter Shapiro * The Wire *"A book that tells the story of rap on New York City’s airwaves, Breaks in the Air is mandatory reading for anyone with an interest in hip hop history and elements of that history that aren’t readily considered, including figures responsible for its early dissemination. As well as providing a meticulous account of the first stations to air rap music, Klaess’ book offers a unique insight into the sociopolitical power of broadcast media and how alongside the growing popularity of hip hop, radio provided a valuable new avenue for Black expression." -- Arusa Qureshi * The Quietus *"Breaks in the Air has a lot to offer anyone interested in hip-hop’s rise, as well as anyone fascinated with the larger stories of Black music and American radio." -- Michaelangelo Matos * Beat Connection *Table of ContentsPreface ix Acknowledgments xiii Introduction. Breaks in the Air 1 1. Deregulating Radio 19 2. Sounding Black Progress in the Post-Civil Rights Era 32 3. Commercializing Rap with Mr. Magic’s Rap Attack 63 4. Programming the Street at WRKS 88 5. Broadcasting the Zulu Nation 116 6. Listening to the Labor of The Awesome 2 Show 139 Epilogue 162 Notes 175 Bibliography 193 Index 215
£70.55
Duke University Press The Anzalduan Theory Handbook
Book SynopsisAnaLouise Keating provides a comprehensive investigation of the foundational theories, methods, and philosophies of Gloria E. Anzaldúa.Table of ContentsGiving Thanks xi Introduction: Writing (About) Anzaldúa, Introducing This Book 1 I. Prelude to Theorizing: Contexts and Methods 13 1. Risking the Personal, Redux: A Biographical-Intellectual Sketch 15 2. Writing as Ritual, Habit, Mission, Partner, and Joy: Anzaldúa’s Writing Process 46 3. How the Theories Emerged: Haciendo Teorías Con Gloria 64 II. The Theories Themselves 77 How to Read Part II 80 4. Eighteen Anzaldúan Theories 81 III. Excavating the Future: The Archives and Beyond 211 5. The Gloria Evangelina Anzaldúa Papers: Creation Story, Treasure Map, and More 213 6. Anzaldúa’s Archival Manuscripts: Overview, Insights, Annotations 225 Postscript: Working with Anzaldúa and Her Theories 303 Notes 309 References 319 Index 323
£73.95
Duke University Press When the Smoke Cleared
Book SynopsisWhen the Smoke Cleared contains poetry written by incarcerated poets in Attica Prison and journal entries and poetry by Celes Tisdale, who led poetry workshops following the uprising there in 1971.Trade Review"When the Smoke Cleared . . . beautifully documents what it means to bear witness while teaching, and the great responsibility that comes with ushering voices from the inside of prison walls to the outside. . . . When the Smoke Cleared is a time capsule of the sharp minds, open hearts, and courageous souls of men brutalized by the United States criminal justice system." -- Malcolm Tariq * PEN America *"When the Smoke Cleared . . . reveals a great deal about survival in the wake of state violence and about the uses of prison education. . . . Supporting efforts like Tisdale’s are important, not because they reform the institution, but because they can aid incarcerated people in building inside-outside relations and solidaristic organizing across facilities." -- Elias Rodriques * Dissent *"Among the many strengths of this anthology is a blunt acknowledgment of the uprising as part of much larger historical mechanisms: namely, the last gasps of the civil rights movement and the nation’s violent reaction to Black liberation. . . . The poems serve as a bulwark against the forgetting of the Attica uprising itself, but they also document the inner life and creative expression of the incarcerated—making for a visceral and intimate argument in favor of prison abolition." -- J. Howard Rosier * The Nation *"A riveting contribution to contemporary literary history and recent social histories of the uprising. This volume poses far-reaching questions about prisons as sites of cultural production and the mobilization of Black political subjectivity at the beginning of what we now call the age of mass incarceration." -- David Sherman * Los Angeles Review of Books *"A valuable glimpse into the beginnings of prison and justice writing programs in the US, especially ones focused on the African American experience, as well as a reminder of the historical and continued importance of such workshops in transforming the US carceral system." -- Timothy Bradford * World Literature Today *Table of ContentsPreface ix Introduction: Celes Tisdale’s Poetry Workshop at Attica / Mark Nowak 1 Introduction to the Original Printing of Betcha Ain’t: Poems from Attica (Detroit: Broadside Press, 1974 / Celes Tisdale 25 Betcha Ain’t: Poems from Attica 29 Celes Tisdale’s Attica Poem and Journals 71 When the Smoke Cleared: More Poems from Attica 103 Epilogue: Remember This 133 Acknowledgments 135 Appendix: Workshop Documents 137
£52.70
Duke University Press To Be Nsalas Daughter
Book SynopsisChérie N. Rivers shows how colonial systems of normalized violence condition the way we see and, through collaboration with contemporary Congolese artists, imagines ways we might learn to see differently.Table of ContentsPreface xvi 1. Elegy of Nsala 1 2. To See Nsala's Daughter 3 3. To Decompose 9 4. To Replicate 29 5. To Contradict 47 6. To Create 65 7. To Love Nsala's Daughter 81 Gratitude 89 Notes 93 Bibliography 99 Index 101 Illustration Credits 105
£59.50
Duke University Press Feminism in Coalition Thinking with US Women of
Book SynopsisLiza Taylor examines how U.S. women of color feminists’ coalitional collective politics of the 1960s, 70s, and 80s is an indispensable resource to contemporary political theory, feminist studies, and intersectional social justice activism.Trade Review"This well-written and clearly organized book challenges the reader to explore effective activism over time with directions for the future. Thus, the book would be ideal for undergraduate and graduate courses in sociology, women’s studies, and criminal justice that include contemporary political theory, feminist studies, and intersectional social justice. The 'call to action' structure of the book creates a platform for the facilitator to really engage the student in the option of taking an actual step to make change within the current politically diverse arena. Exercises such as this makes the book unique within this discipline and a must have within the classroom." -- Shauntey James * Ethnic and Racial Studies *"Taylor is a feminist political theorist who offers sophisticated arguments about philosophical principles and feminist practices together with an accessible discussion of core texts from women of color. She writes for multidisciplinary feminist readers already familiar with classics such as position papers from the Combahee River Collective and essays by Audre Lorde but does so with sufficient attention to explaining these and other arguments from the rich field of feminist theorizing. Students just becoming aware of this area of study will get a vibrant introduction, and more knowledgeable readers will find this an innovative and helpful approach. . . . Highly recommended. General readers through faculty; professionals." -- M. M. Ferree * Choice *Table of ContentsAcknowledgments ix Introduction 1 1. From Rosa Luxemburg to the Combahee River Collective: Spontaneous Coalition as a Precursor to Intersectional Marxism and Politico-Ethical Coalition Politics 33 2. Women of Color Feminism and Politico-Ethical Coalition Politics: Recentering the Politics of Coalition with Reagon, Smith, Combahee, and Lorde 67 3. Coalition from the Inside Out: Struggling toward Coalitional Identity and Developing a Coalitional Consciousness with Lode, Anzaldúa, Sandoval, and Pratt 106 4. Writing Feminist Theory, Doing Feminist Politics: Rethinking Collective Feminist Authorship with This Bridge Called My Back 150 5. The Women's March on Washington and Politico-Ethical Coalitional Opportunities in the Age of Trump 189 Conclusion: Lessons for Contemporary and Future Feminist Activists 225 Notes 249 References 259 Index 277
£78.30
Duke University Press Crip Genealogies
Book SynopsisThe contributors to Crip Genealogies reorient the field of disability studies by centering the work of transnational feminism, queer of color critique, and trans scholarship and activism. They challenge the white, Western, and Northern rights-based genealogy of disability studies, showing how a single coherent narrative of the field is a mode of exclusion that relies on logics of whiteness and imperialism. The contributors examine how disability justice activists work in concert with other social justice projects, explore crip environments, create alternate disciplinary genealogies, and reject notions of the model minority. Throughout, they demonstrate how the mandate for a single genealogy of the discipline whitewashes disability and continues forms of violence. By cripping disability studies, the contributors allow for divergent histories, the coexistence of anti-ableist and antiracist theorizing, and a radically just and capacious understanding of disability. ContTrade Review"This is an essential anthology that challenges the existing (white, Western/Northern, imperialist) frameworks of disability studies in favor of lenses focused on transnational feminism and queer/trans of color critique and activism." -- Karla J. Strand * Ms. *
£77.35
Duke University Press Between Banat
Book SynopsisMejdulene Bernard Shomali examines homoeroticism and nonnormative sexualities between Arab women in transnational Arab literature, art, and film to show how women, femmes, and nonbinary people disrupt stereotypical and Orientalist representations of the Arab woman.Table of ContentsAcknowledgments ix Introduction 1 1. A Thousand and One Scheherazades: Arab Femininities and Foreclosing Discourses 27 2. Between Women: Homoeroticism in Golden Era Egyptian Cinema 58 3. Longing in Arabic: Ambivalent Identities in Arabic Novels 90 4. Love Letters: Queer Intimacies and the Arabic Language 119 5. Sahq: Queer Femme Futures 138 Notes 175 Bibliography 187 Index 199
£74.70
Duke University Press Circuits of the Sacred
Book SynopsisDrawing on memoir, creative writing, theoretical analysis, and ethnography in Santo Domingo, Havana, and New Jersey, Carlos Ulises Decena examines transnational black Caribbean immigrant queer life and spirit.Table of ContentsGratitudes ix Part 0. Orígenes (Origins) Pensar Maricón (Faggotology): An Introduction 1 1. Re-membered Life: A Composition for Egun 23 Part I. Caminos 2. Bridge Crónica: A Triptych, with Elegguá 33 3. Experiencing the Evidence 57 Part II. Dos Puentes, Tránsitos 4. Loving Stones: A Transnational Patakí 81 5. ¡Santo! Repurposed Flesh and the Suspension of the Mirror in Santería Initiation 102 Part III. Trances 6. Indecent Conocimientos: A Suite Rasanblaj in Funny Keys 125 Epístola al Futuro/An Epistle to the Future 155 Notes 159 Bibliography 175 Index
£67.15
Duke University Press Archive of Tongues
Book SynopsisMoon Charania explores feminine dispossession and the brown diaspora through a reflection on the life of her mother, recovering otherwise silenced modes of brown mothers' survival, disobedience and meaning-making that are often only lived out in invisible, intimate spaces.Trade Review“Moon Charania’s rearticulations of the now-sedimented tropes of nation, gender, and patriarchy are very moving. I found myself with an entirely new set of questions about my own theorizing, feminism, and prejudices in regard to not only decolonial and gender studies, but my family history as well. While Archive of Tongues is deeply personal, it productively unsettles what much of Western feminism continues to take for granted, if not reify, about women in the Global South, Pakistani women, brown women, and migrant women. This book will be so important to feminist, decolonial, and transnational thinkers and writers as a coming-of-age feminist diasporic perspective on grappling with gendered and raced intergenerational trauma and violence.” -- Jasbir K. Puar, author of * The Right to Maim: Debility, Capacity, Disability *“Archive of Tongues is lively, taut, and wickedly smart. Moon Charania unflinchingly guides the reader through biographical, anecdotal, and theoretical interventions. The stakes of her project are major: the reorientation and decolonization of knowledge. Making tangible the depth and instability of bodily/lived knowledge, this compelling book will contribute to psychoanalysis, critical ethnic studies, women of color feminisms, queer studies, and affect studies.” -- Amber Jamilla Musser, author of * Sensual Excess: Queer Femininity and Brown Jouissance *Table of ContentsPreface ix Gratitudes xv Prologue xxi Introduction. A Story on Tongues 1 1. Abject Tongues 27 2. Forked Tongues 63 3. Promiscuous Tongues 89 4. The Other End of the Tongue 122 Afterword 139 Notes 143 Bibliography 155 Index 163
£70.55
Duke University Press Going Underground
Book SynopsisLara Langer Cohen excavates the long history of the underground in nineteenth-century US literature, showing how these formations of the underground can inspire new forms of political resistance.Table of ContentsAcknowledgments vii Introduction: A Basement Shut Off and Forgotten during the Nineteenth Century 1 1. The “Blackness of Darkness” in Mammoth Cave 25 2. Early Black Radical Undergrounds 46 3. The Underground Railroad’s Undergrounds 74 4. The Depths of Astonishment: City Mysteries and Subterranean Unknowability 104 5. “To Drop beneath the Floors of the Outer World”: Paschal Beverly Randolph’s Occult Undergrounds 133 6. Subterranean Fire: Anarchist Visions of the Underground 166 Epilogue: Staying Underground 198 Notes 205 Bibliography 245 Index 267
£74.70
Duke University Press Puta Life
Book SynopsisIn Puta Life, Juana María Rodríguez probes the ways that sexual labor and Latina sexuality become visual phenomena. Drawing on state archives, illustrated biographies, documentary films, photojournalistic essays, graphic novels, and digital spaces, she focuses on the figure of the puta—the whore, that phantasmatic figure of Latinized feminine excess. Rodríguez’s eclectic archive features the faces and stories of women whose lives have been mediated by sex work''s stigmatization and criminalization—washerwomen and masked wrestlers, porn stars and sexiles. Rodríguez examines how visual tropes of racial and sexual deviance expose feminine subjects to misogyny and violence, attuning our gaze to how visual documentation shapes perceptions of sexual labor. Throughout this poignant and personal text, Rodríguez brings the language of affect and aesthetics to bear upon understandings of gender, age, race, sexuality, labor, disability, Trade Review"Puta Life is a rigorous and nuanced contribution to affirming sex workers’ lives. This is reason alone to read it. But I cherish Puta Life because it offered me a new way of sensing my mother’s painful past and my own history of abuse beyond exposure. Above all, Puta Life gifted me with a deep respect for all I can never know about other women’s lives." -- Elizabeth Hall * Full Stop *Table of ContentsAcknowledgments vii Introduction 1 Part I. Archival Encounters and Affective Traces: Visual Genealogies of Puta Life 1. Women in Public: Biopolitics, Portraiture, and Poetics 37 2. Colonial Echoes and Aesthetic Allure: Tracking the Genres of Puta Life 68 Part II. Visions, Voices, and Impressions Left Behind: Representing Puta Life 3. Carnal Knowledge, Interpretive Practices: Authorizing Vanessa del Rio 107 4. Touching Alterity: The Women of Casa Xochiquetzal 140 5. Seeing, Sensing, Feeling: Adela Vázquez’s Amazing Past 180 Epilogue: Toward a Conclusion That Does Not Die or a Subject That Is Allowed to Live 211 Notes 215 References 243 Index 259
£70.55
Duke University Press Disappearing Rooms
Book SynopsisIn Disappearing Rooms Michelle Castañeda lays bare the criminalization of race enacted every day in US immigration courts and detention centers. She uses a performance studies perspective to show how the theatrical concept of mise-en-scène offers new insights about immigration law and the absurdist dynamics of carceral space. Castañeda draws upon her experiences in immigration trials as an interpreter and courtroom companion to analyze the scenography—lighting, staging, framing, gesture, speech, and choreography—of specific rooms within the immigration enforcement system. Castañeda’s ethnographies of proceedings in a “removal” office in New York City, a detention center courtroom in Texas, and an asylum office in the Northeast reveal the depersonalizing violence enacted in immigration law through its embodied, ritualistic, and affective components. She shows how the creative practices of detained and disappeared people liTrade Review"The book … is a quintessential one in times of increasing hatred towards immigrants. This timely book will help the reader understand the intensity of immigration crises and the need for the growth of a humanitarian world than a world with borders." -- T.S. Gangothri * Social Identities *Table of ContentsAcknowledgments ix Introduction 1 1. Removal Room: Disappearance and the Practice of Accompaniment 19 2. The Prison-Courtroom: No-Show Justice in Family Detention 56 3. Bring Me the Room: Tragic Recognition and the Right Not to Tell Your Story 91 Coda 129 Notes 135 References 159 Index 177
£67.15
Duke University Press The Latinx Guide to Graduate School
Book SynopsisIn The Latinx Guide to Graduate School Genevieve Negrón-Gonzales and Magdalena L. Barrera provide prospective and current Latinx graduate students in the humanities and social sciences fields with a roadmap for surviving and thriving in advanced-degree programs. They document the unwritten rules of graduate education that impact Latinx students, demystifying and clarifying the essential requirements for navigating graduate school that Latinx students may not know because they are often the first in their families to walk that path. Topics range from identifying the purpose of graduate research, finding the right program, and putting together a strong application to developing a graduate student identity, cultivating professional and personal relationships, and mapping out a post--graduate school career. The book also includes resources for undocumented students. Equal parts how-to guide, personal reflection, manifesto, and academic musing, this book gives a culturally resonant perspective that speaks to the unique Latinx graduate student experience.Table of ContentsAcknowledgments xi Introduction: You Thought You Were Buying a How-to Book but Ended Up Getting a Love Letter, Manifesto, and Flashlight 1 1. To Grad School or Not to Grad School? 23 2. Learning to Be a Grad Student 59 3. Essential Skills in Graduate School 77 4. Unwritten Rules of the Academy: Navigating the Gray Area 121 5. Navigating Professional Relationships in Graduate School 145 6. Navigating Personal Relationships in Graduate School 180 7. Life after Graduate School 205 Conclusion: Five Mandamientos for Remaking the Academy 224 UndocuGrads: Undocumeneted and Applying to Grad School (FAQs) / Carolina Valdivia 229 Glossary of Terms 233 Notes 237 Bibliography 243 Index 253
£70.55
Duke University Press Strolling in the Ruins
Book SynopsisIn Strolling in the Ruins Faith Smith engages with a period in the history of the Anglophone Caribbean often overlooked as nondescript, quiet, and embarrassingly pro-imperial within the larger narrative of Jamaican and Trinidadian nationalism. Between the 1865 Morant Bay Rebellion and World War I, British imperialism was taken for granted among both elites and ordinary people, while nationalist discourses would not begin to shape political imagination in the West Indies for decades. Smith argues that this moment, far from being uneventful, disrupts the inevitability of nationhood in the mid-twentieth century and anticipates the Caribbean’s present-day relationship to global power. Smith assembles and analyzes a diverse set of texts, from Carnival songs, poems, and novels to newspapers, photographs, and gardens, to examine theoretical and literary-historiographic questions concerning time and temporality, empire and diaspora, immigration and indigeneity, gender and the poliTable of ContentsAcknowledgments ix Introduction. Introducing a Quiet Period 1 1. Cuba, South Africa, and the Anglophone Caribbean’s New Imperial Century 33 2. Ruination’s Intimate Architecture 68 3. Photography’s “Typical Negro” 118 4. Plotting Inheritance 144 Coda 186 Notes 191 Bibliography 229 Index 257
£70.55
Duke University Press Trafficking in Antiblackness
Book SynopsisIn Trafficking in Antiblackness Lyndsey P. Beutin analyzes how campaigns to end human trafficking—often described as “modern-day slavery”—invoke the memory of transatlantic slavery to support positions ultimately grounded in antiblackness. Drawing on contemporary antitrafficking visual culture and media discourse, she shows how a constellation of media, philanthropic, NGO, and government actors invested in ending human trafficking repurpose the history of transatlantic slavery and abolition in ways that undermine contemporary struggles for racial justice and slavery reparations. The recurring narratives, images, and figures such as “slavery in Africa,” “Arab slave traders,” and “Black incapacity for self-governance” discursively turn Black people across the diaspora into the enslavers of the past and present in place of white Americans and Europeans. Doing so, Beutin contends, creates a rhetorical defense against being Table of ContentsAcknowledgments ix Introduction 1 1. Reparations and the Rise of Antitrafficking Discourse 31 2. Blaming Black Mothers 61 Interlude: #FreeCyntoiaBrown 93 3. When Slavery’s Not Black 101 4. Deceptive Empiricism 133 Interlude: #Charlottesville 165 5. History Is Antiblackness 173 Afterword 193 Notes 197 Bibliography 237 Index 257
£70.55
Duke University Press Insignificant Things
Book SynopsisIn Insignificant Things Matthew Francis Rarey traces the history of the African-associated amulets that enslaved and other marginalized people carried as tools of survival in the Black Atlantic world from the seventeenth to the nineteenth centuries. Often considered visually benign by white Europeans, these amulet pouches, commonly known as “mandingas,” were used across Africa, Brazil, and Portugal and contained myriad objects, from herbs and Islamic prayers to shells and coins. Drawing on Arabic-language narratives from the West African Sahel, the archives of the Portuguese Inquisition, sixteenth- and seventeenth-century European travel and merchant accounts of the West African Coast, and early nineteenth-century Brazilian police records, Rarey shows how mandingas functioned as portable archives of their makers’ experiences of enslavement, displacement, and diaspora. He presents them as examples of the visual culture of enslavement and critical to conceptualizTable of ContentsAcknowledgments ix Introduction. Significance, Survival, and Silence 1 1. Labels 31 2. Contents 72 3. Markings 124 4. Revolts 171 Epilogue 208 Notes 217 Works Cited 249 Index 275
£70.55
Duke University Press Black Feminism in the Caribbean and the United S
Book Synopsis
£15.19
Duke University Press Sissy Insurgencies
Book SynopsisMarlon B. Ross explores the figure of the sissy as central to how Americans have imagined, articulated, and negotiated black masculinity from the 1880s to the present.Trade Review“In this remarkable work of African American intellectual history, Marlon B. Ross refuses to allow the sloppy modes of thought that have us tripping over the distinction between gender conduct and sexual orientation. He is vigilant about the matter of maintaining a distinction between the sissy and the homosexual. This long-overdue study will have a very large impact on queer studies, masculinity studies, and African American studies.” -- Robert F. Reid-Pharr, author of * Archives of Flesh: African America, Spain, and Post-humanist Critique *“Sissy Insurgencies is a model of careful historical and literary analysis from a scholar who has made an indelible mark on masculinity studies, black studies, and queer of color critique. Ambitious and far reaching in scope, this book is a stunning work of sissy insurgent genius.” -- C. Riley Snorton, author of * Black on Both Sides: A Racial History of Trans Identity *"Including considerations of and references to works by Richard Wright, Langston Hughes, and Amiri Baraka, among others, Sissy Insurgencies is as much a provocative literary study of African-American fiction and autobiography as it is an examination of the role of the sissy in Black and mainstream American culture." -- Reginald Harris * Gay and Lesbian Review *Table of ContentsPreamble. Sissies Everywhere ix 1. Can the Sissy Be Insurgent? 1 2. Sissy Housekeeping: Cleanliness, Gender Dissonance, and the Spoils of Political Patronage at Washington's Tuskegee 51 3. Un/fit Manliness: Evading Masculine Brutality in James Weldon Johnson's Sissy Narratives 111 4. Baldwin's Sissy Heroics 165 5. Sissy but Not Gay: Anatomy of the Post-Civil Rights Straight Black Sissy 233 6. Gay but Not Sissy: Race and the Queering of the Professional Athlete 283 Postscript. Whatever Happened or Will Happen to the Sissy-Boy? 343 Notes 349 Bibliography 403 Index 433
£23.39
Duke University Press The Florida Room
Book SynopsisAlexandra T. Vazquez listens to the music and history of Miami to explore the city's sonic cultures and its material and social realities.Trade Review“Alexandra T. Vazquez’s bold, brilliant, and refreshingly unconventional meditation on sonic placemaking in Florida is fearless and groundbreaking. Compressing the deep, wide, and volatile politics and poetics of the global South into a focused exploration of the “Sunshine State,” The Florida Room reminds readers of what daring, innovative, and challenging theory looks and sounds like. This luminous book opens up our notions of what counts as theory as well as who gets identified as theorists.” -- Daphne A. Brooks, author of * Liner Notes for the Revolution: The Intellectual Life of Black Feminist Sound *“Not only does The Florida Room come to us at just the right time in the history of Miami cultures, it arrives from a scholar who is a great interpreter of the interplay between music, performance, and the social. Alexandra T. Vazquez amasses an archive of fascinating materials, listens to them in every sense for what they say about themselves and that which circulates around them, and accounts for that creativity and thought in prose that is virtuosic and open to surprises. This singular book is a true gift.” -- Antonio López, author of * Unbecoming Blackness: The Diaspora Cultures of Afro-Cuban America *"As Vazquez identifies unexpected resonances and collaborations—snaking her way through singer Betty Wright, the Indigenous rock group Tiger Tiger, and Miami bass’s Luke Skyywalker Records—her prose is lively and darting, as if refusing to let a central narrative congeal. It's a loving and rich account of somewhere that exists both in real life and the imagination, too abundant to be contained." -- Cat Zhang * PItchfork, Best Music Books of 2022 *Table of ContentsPreface. Head for the Beach ix 1. The Florida Room 1 2. Miami from the Spoils 46 3. Drums Take Time 81 4. Bass is the Place 117 Afterword 156 Acknowledgments 159 Notes 165 Bibliography 203 Index 215
£18.89
Duke University Press Scales of Captivity
Book SynopsisMary Pat Brady traces the figure of the captive and cast-off child over 150 years of Latinx/Chicanx literature as a critique of colonial modernity and the forms of confinement that underpin racialized citizenship.Trade Review“With its equally lyrical and incisive political commentary, Scales of Captivity rigorously explores how the (re)production of the US settler colonial racial state depends upon both a monopoly on violence and a monopoly on movement. It makes a crucial, timely, and pathbreaking intervention into literary and cultural studies, immigration studies, political geography, and ethnic, gender, and sexuality studies.” -- Kirstie A. Dorr, author of * On Site, In Sound: Performance Geographies in América Latina *“Mary Pat Brady has written a multilayered, bracing study with deep historical roots and startling contemporary resonance. She reanimates questions of citizenship and exclusion at the heart of Chicanx/Latinx studies, while simultaneously uncovering the inextricability of childhood, queer politics, and acts of witnessing. Brilliantly argued and compellingly written, this stellar work is the guidebook we desperately need to make sense of endlessly shifting borders and boundaries.” -- Richard T. Rodríguez, author of * Next of Kin: The Family in Chicano/a Cultural Politics *“As ambitious as it is thorough, Scales of Captivity scours over 150 years of philosophical, political, and literary history, supplying the reader with fascinating and pertinent insights into the creation and maintenance of the complex racial/social hierarchies that currently exist throughout the US-Mexican border complex. . . . The counter-theories that Brady offers to combat these systems of oppression are even more provocative, making it a must read for anyone seriously interested in border issues.” -- Chandler R. Thompson * Arizona Journal of Hispanic Cultural Studies *"Scholars of western American literature will find in Scales of Captivity a historically aware sketch of 175 years of the central role of capture in building Spanish/Mexican/US sovereignty in the West, as well as nuanced close readings of a broad selection of Latine cultural production situated in the region—which, Brady’s analyses remind us, has always been many regions." -- Sarah J. Ropp * Western American Literature *Table of ContentsAcknowledgments ix Introduction. The Scalar Lien 1 1. Captivating Ties: On Children without Childhoods 37 2. Plausible Deniability: Pursuing the Traces of Captivity 79 3. Submerged Captivities: Moving toward Queer Horizontality 119 4. N + 1: Sex and the Hypervisible (Invisible) Migrant 153 5. Misplaced: Peopling a Deportation Imaginary 197 Conclusion. Density's Resistance to Scale 239 Notes 249 Bibliography 275 Index 293
£20.69
Duke University Press Violent Utopia
Book SynopsisIn Violent Utopia Jovan Scott Lewis retells the history and afterlife of the 1921 Tulsa race massacre, from the post-Reconstruction migration of Black people to Oklahoma Indian Territory to contemporary efforts to rebuild Black prosperity. He focuses on how the massacre in Tulsa’s Greenwood neighborhood—colloquially known as Black Wall Street—curtailed the freedom built there. Rather than framing the massacre as a one-off event, Lewis places it in a larger historical and social context of widespread patterns of anti-Black racism, segregation, and dispossession in Tulsa and beyond. He shows how the processes that led to the massacre, subsequent urban renewal, and intergenerational poverty shored up by nonprofits constitute a form of continuous slow violence. Now, in their attempts to redevelop resources for self-determination, Black Tulsans must reconcile a double inheritance: the massacre’s violence and the historical freedom and prosperity that GreenwoodTrade Review"Violent Utopia’s findings shed a searching light on Oklahoman history but are not limited to or by it. Whilst humble enough to only define itself as a ‘minor contribution’ to the reparations movement, Violent Utopia’s great strength is an analytical dexterity that studiously balances the dialectical dance of anti-Black violence and Black freedom dreams." -- Thomas Cryer * LSE Review of Books *“This thought-provoking book is worth reading. It shows that much can be learned from studying Black communities from a critical race perspective.” -- Robert L. Boyd * Ethnic and Racial Studies *"Skillfully incorporates the tools of geography, ethnography, and history to investigate issues surrounding reparations and what they might accomplish for the African American community. . . . Highly recommended. Graduate students, faculty, and professionals." * Choice *"Lewis's Violent Utopia offers a fresh and nuanced perspective on the 1921 Tulsa Race Massacre and its legacies. ... The book is a stellar ethnohistorical model for scholars." -- Jajuan Johnson * Journal of Southern History *Table of ContentsAcknowledgments ix Introduction 1 1. Violence 21 2. Inheritance 55 3. Restoration 93 4. Repair 131 5. Territory 174 Conclusion 210 Notes 223 Bibliography 239 Index 251
£18.89
Duke University Press A Kiss across the Ocean
Book SynopsisIn A Kiss across the Ocean Richard T. Rodríguez examines the relationship between British post-punk musicians and their Latinx audiences in the United States since the 1980s. Melding memoir with cultural criticism, Rodríguez spotlights a host of influential bands and performers including Siouxsie and the Banshees, Adam Ant, Bauhaus, Soft Cell, Frankie Goes to Hollywood, and Pet Shop Boys. He recounts these bands’ importance for him and other Latinx kids and discusses their frequent identification with these bands’ glamorous performance of difference. Whether it was Siouxsie Sioux drawing inspiration from Latinx contemporaries and cultural practices or how Soft Cell singer Marc Almond’s lyrics were attuned to the vibrancy of queer Latinidad, Rodríguez shows how Latinx culture helped shape British post-punk. He traces the fandom networks that link these groups across space and time to illuminate how popular music establishes and facilitates iTrade Review"This at-once scholarly and personal book is a moving tribute to the escapism and comfort that music can give to the most marginalized members of society: Rodríguez provides well-researched analysis of the influences on and of post-punk bands, in realms from racial politics to ethnic cultural dynamics, and also writes of his own experiences as a young fan searching for belonging. Rodríguez’s book successfully balances an intellectual understanding of the cultural ramifications of post-punk music with poignant and alluring background stories, appealing to scholars and fans alike." -- Lisa Henry * Library Journal *"In this part-memoir, part-ethnography of England and SoCal in the 1980s, author Rodríguez, a professor of media and cultural studies and English at UC Riverside, investigates what binds these two seemingly disparate cultures. Starting with his own tween-age fandom of Boy George and the Culture Club, Rodríguez plumbs the depths of the passionate, sometimes tainted love affair between British post-punks and the Latinos who worship at their altar." -- Suzy Exposito * Los Angeles Times *"Extremely well written and researched the book is a fantastic exploration into the wider reaches of UK post-punk and compulsive reading for those with an interest in subculture studies and the post-punk scene itself." -- Lee Powell * Vive Le Rock *"Rodríguez could’ve easily ripped into a press corps that still largely thinks Latinos only listen to Spanish-language music backed by either accordions or congas. He does critique them but limits the bile in favor of a warm, poignant memoir-analysis, which he writes is 'animated by a deep investigative labor propelled by fannish investment.'" -- GustavoArellano * Los Angeles Times *"An intriguing study of how music builds connections between different communities, and how pop desire translates over time and space." -- Rob Sheffield * Rolling Stone *"Ultimately, Rodriguez’s book is a tribute to the music that not only provided a soundtrack to his teenage years but also enabled him to navigate his way through the thorny questions of identity." -- Gilbert Garcia * San Antonio Express-News *"Tender, wry, delicate, and rich, A Kiss across the Ocean is a love letter to the theatrically potent musical and visual gestures of the artists and bands of the British postpunk scene that made a difference in the mid-1980s and continue to do so today, even when people may have forgotten some of the bands’ names." -- Caridad Svich * Theatre Survey *"In seven short chapters, the author’s intertwining of autobiography and a deeply researched history is a winning approach for articulating the equally intertwined friendships, influence and politics of British post-punk and Latin American cultures." -- Maria Elena Buszek * Punk & Post-Punk *"The book is valuable in furthering a grasp of the deeply nuanced cultural hybridity, orientation and style sensibilities that have informed U.S. Latinx life from its very beginnings, and how this community has in turn been pivotal in determining artistic output beyond our borders and into the mainstream. . . . , Rodriguez opens up vistas from personal experience and lifelong research to chart dizzying connections across fandom, fantasy and friendships, showing influences from Latinos on both U.S. coasts on recording artists who received and processed Latinx culture in tandem with their trans-Atlantic careers." -- Benjamin Ortiz * New Lines Magazine *Table of ContentsAcknowledgments ix A Kiss Across the Ocean: An Introduction 1 1. Red over White 27 2. Touching Prince Charming 48 3. Darker Entries 67 4. The Shining Sinners 85 5. Zoot Suits and Secondhand Knowledge 104 6. Mexican Americanos 128 7. Latin/o American Party 147 Conclusion. Dedicated to the One I Love 164 Notes 175 References 207 Index 231
£18.99
Duke University Press Feels Right
Book SynopsisIn Feels Right Kemi Adeyemi presents an ethnography of how black queer women in Chicago use dance to assert their physical and affective rights to the city. Adeyemi stages the book in queer dance parties in gentrifying neighborhoods, where good feelings are good business. But feeling good is elusive for black queer women whose nightlives are undercut by white people, heterosexuality, neoliberal capitalism, burnout, and other buzzkills. Adeyemi documents how black queer women respond to these conditions: how they destroy DJ booths, argue with one another, dance slowly, and stop partying altogether. Their practices complicate our expectations that life at night, on the queer dance floor, or among black queer community simply feels good. Adeyemi’s framework of “feeling right” instead offers a closer, kinesthetic look at how black queer women adroitly manage feeling itself as a complex right they should be afforded in cities that violently structure their movementsTrade Review“Adeyemi’s rich ethnographic observations on Black queer women’s parties in Chicago demonstrate why the dance floor is much more than just a utopian promise of happiness within a hostile socio-political environment. . . . Through dancing and choreography, queerness is not only performed but also learned and experienced by people who may not have encountered it before.” -- Yener Bayramoglu * Ethnic and Racial Studies *"What is innovative about Adeyemi’s text ... is that she carves out a scholarly field that reflects her interest in queer nightlife in the most expansive definition of the phrase. ... Feels Right is a political project that aims to drive many Black queer women to return to nightlife even if their pleasure is contested on the dance floor and in the city." -- Marietta Kosma * European Journal of American Studies *Table of ContentsPreface ix Acknowledgments xiii Introduction 1 1. Slo ‘Mo and the Pace of Black Queer Life 39 2. Where’s the Joy in Accountability? Black Joy at Its Limits 62 3. Ordinary E N E R G Y 96 Conclusion: An Oral History of the Future of Burnout 120 Notes 143 Bibliography 159 Index 171
£17.99
Duke University Press Breaks in the Air
Book SynopsisIn Breaks in the Air John Klaess tells the story of rap’s emergence on New York City’s airwaves by examining how artists and broadcasters adapted hip hop’s performance culture to radio. Initially, artists and DJs brought their live practice to radio by buying time on low-bandwidth community stations and building new communities around their shows. Later, stations owned by New York’s African American elite, such as WBLS, reluctantly began airing rap even as they pursued a sound rooted in respectability, urban sophistication, and polish. At the same time, large commercial stations like WRKS programmed rap once it became clear that the music attracted a demographic that was valuable to advertisers. Moving between intimate portraits of single radio shows and broader examinations of the legal, financial, cultural, and political forces that indelibly shaped the sound of rap radio, Klaess shows how early rap radio provides a lens through which to better understaTrade Review"Not to be missed, musicologist Klaess has written a fascinating chronicle of hip-hop radio stations. . . . Klaess’s book is a must-read for all those interested in tracing hip-hop’s sociopolitical/racial chord back to its airwaves origins." -- Alessandro Cimino * Library Journal *"This is a book about radio as a medium, not the music that flows through it, and it deserves praise for shining a light on the people behind the tapes who have been underappreciated by more conventional histories." -- Peter Shapiro * The Wire *"A book that tells the story of rap on New York City’s airwaves, Breaks in the Air is mandatory reading for anyone with an interest in hip hop history and elements of that history that aren’t readily considered, including figures responsible for its early dissemination. As well as providing a meticulous account of the first stations to air rap music, Klaess’ book offers a unique insight into the sociopolitical power of broadcast media and how alongside the growing popularity of hip hop, radio provided a valuable new avenue for Black expression." -- Arusa Qureshi * The Quietus *"Breaks in the Air has a lot to offer anyone interested in hip-hop’s rise, as well as anyone fascinated with the larger stories of Black music and American radio." -- Michaelangelo Matos * Beat Connection *Table of ContentsPreface ix Acknowledgments xiii Introduction. Breaks in the Air 1 1. Deregulating Radio 19 2. Sounding Black Progress in the Post-Civil Rights Era 32 3. Commercializing Rap with Mr. Magic’s Rap Attack 63 4. Programming the Street at WRKS 88 5. Broadcasting the Zulu Nation 116 6. Listening to the Labor of The Awesome 2 Show 139 Epilogue 162 Notes 175 Bibliography 193 Index 215
£18.99
Duke University Press The Anzalduan Theory Handbook
Book SynopsisAnaLouise Keating provides a comprehensive investigation of the foundational theories, methods, and philosophies of Gloria E. Anzaldúa.Table of ContentsGiving Thanks xi Introduction: Writing (About) Anzaldúa, Introducing This Book 1 I. Prelude to Theorizing: Contexts and Methods 13 1. Risking the Personal, Redux: A Biographical-Intellectual Sketch 15 2. Writing as Ritual, Habit, Mission, Partner, and Joy: Anzaldúa’s Writing Process 46 3. How the Theories Emerged: Haciendo Teorías Con Gloria 64 II. The Theories Themselves 77 How to Read Part II 80 4. Eighteen Anzaldúan Theories 81 III. Excavating the Future: The Archives and Beyond 211 5. The Gloria Evangelina Anzaldúa Papers: Creation Story, Treasure Map, and More 213 6. Anzaldúa’s Archival Manuscripts: Overview, Insights, Annotations 225 Postscript: Working with Anzaldúa and Her Theories 303 Notes 309 References 319 Index 323
£20.69
Duke University Press When the Smoke Cleared
Book SynopsisWhen the Smoke Cleared contains poetry written by incarcerated poets in Attica Prison and journal entries and poetry by Celes Tisdale, who led poetry workshops following the uprising there in 1971.Trade Review"When the Smoke Cleared . . . beautifully documents what it means to bear witness while teaching, and the great responsibility that comes with ushering voices from the inside of prison walls to the outside. . . . When the Smoke Cleared is a time capsule of the sharp minds, open hearts, and courageous souls of men brutalized by the United States criminal justice system." -- Malcolm Tariq * PEN America *"When the Smoke Cleared . . . reveals a great deal about survival in the wake of state violence and about the uses of prison education. . . . Supporting efforts like Tisdale’s are important, not because they reform the institution, but because they can aid incarcerated people in building inside-outside relations and solidaristic organizing across facilities." -- Elias Rodriques * Dissent *"Among the many strengths of this anthology is a blunt acknowledgment of the uprising as part of much larger historical mechanisms: namely, the last gasps of the civil rights movement and the nation’s violent reaction to Black liberation. . . . The poems serve as a bulwark against the forgetting of the Attica uprising itself, but they also document the inner life and creative expression of the incarcerated—making for a visceral and intimate argument in favor of prison abolition." -- J. Howard Rosier * The Nation *"A riveting contribution to contemporary literary history and recent social histories of the uprising. This volume poses far-reaching questions about prisons as sites of cultural production and the mobilization of Black political subjectivity at the beginning of what we now call the age of mass incarceration." -- David Sherman * Los Angeles Review of Books *"A valuable glimpse into the beginnings of prison and justice writing programs in the US, especially ones focused on the African American experience, as well as a reminder of the historical and continued importance of such workshops in transforming the US carceral system." -- Timothy Bradford * World Literature Today *Table of ContentsPreface ix Introduction: Celes Tisdale’s Poetry Workshop at Attica / Mark Nowak 1 Introduction to the Original Printing of Betcha Ain’t: Poems from Attica (Detroit: Broadside Press, 1974 / Celes Tisdale 25 Betcha Ain’t: Poems from Attica 29 Celes Tisdale’s Attica Poem and Journals 71 When the Smoke Cleared: More Poems from Attica 103 Epilogue: Remember This 133 Acknowledgments 135 Appendix: Workshop Documents 137
£15.19
Duke University Press Aint But a Few of Us
Book SynopsisAin't But a Few of Us presents over two dozen candid dialogues with Black jazz critics and journalists who discuss the barriers to access for Black jazz critics and how they contend with the world of jazz writing dominated by white men.Trade Review"With the conductive virtuosity of Butch Morris, Jenkins . . . assembles an impressive paean to the Black writers who’ve dedicated their lives to capturing in language what jazz musicians conjure in a split second. With more than two dozen thoughtful profiles, this is a fascinating dive into the sociopolitical realities of being a Black writer—in this case, Black writers who love jazz and express that love in vivid prose. . . . A memorable love letter to Black art, Black joy, and the writers who have sought to tell it like it really is." * Kirkus Reviews *"A modern, fresh collection of interviews. . . . A triumphantly panoramic view of the visceral experience of Black jazz journalists and those who choose to cover the music successfully, by being published widely and regularly throughout their careers." -- Jordannah Elizabeth * New York Amsterdam News *"The spectrum of vibrant Black voices in Ain’t But a Few of Us is broad, relaying their experiences in the trenches of the jazz media field—from cub reporters to trailblazers.. . . . The book serves as a testament to the experiences of a rare few, proof-positive that Black writers and editors are not alone." -- Ayana Contreras * Downbeat *"To say that this book is an essential read is an understatement. It is essential not only to enjoy the eloquence and grace of the writing, the depth of knowledge, expertise and experience of these writers, but because things must change. Jazz needs more black voices. The world needs more black voices." -- Fiona Ross * Kind of Jazz *"For jazz buffs and those interested in American culture, this is a spellbinding read and quite impossible to put down. This is an open invitation for the curious wanting an aural adventure." -- Robert Fleming * African American Literature Book Club *"The importance of Willard’s new book Ain’t But A Few of Us cannot be underestimated. A collection of journeys – lived experiences – from the voices of 49 truly inspirational black writers. It is groundbreaking for many reasons. Groundbreaking because never before has the lack of black jazz journalists been documented. Groundbreaking because never before has such an inspirational collection of writers been given a platform to share their experiences. Willard has given a long overdue platform to incredible voices." -- Fiona Ross * Jazz in Europe *"Revelatory, inspiring, passionate, damning and sobering." -- Raymond Cummings * The Wire *"Ain't But a Few of Us should be considered required reading for high school and college students, particularly those pursuing careers in music or journalism. . . . For students, each writer offers a personal history of their lives with shared commonalities in their insights, the importance of inclusion and diversity, and, regardless of barriers and disparities, giving up is never an option." -- Ron Scott * New York Amsterdam News *Table of ContentsAcknowledgments ix Introduction / Willard Jenkins 1 1. Roundtable / Eric Arnold, Jordannah Elizabeth, Bill Francis, Steve Monroe, Rahsaan Clark Morris, Robin Washington, and K. Leander Williams 15 2. The Authors / Playthell Benjamin, Herb Boyd, Karen Chilton, Farah Jasmine Griffin, Robin D. G. Kelley, Tammy Kernodle, Guthrie P. Ramsey Jr., Gene Seymour, A. B. Spellman, and Greg Tate 27 3. Black Jazz Magazine Editors and Publishers / Jo Ann Cheatham (Pure Jazz), Jim Harrison (Jazz Spotlite News), Haybert Houston (Jazz Now), and Ron Welburn (The Grackle) 89 4. Black Dispatch Contributors / Robin James and Ron Scott 111 5. Magazine Freelancers / Bill Brower, Janine Coveney, Lofton Emenari III, Eugene Holley Jr., John Murph, Don Palmer, and Ron Wynn 125 6. Newspaper Writers and Columnists / Martin Johnson, Greg Thomas, and Hollie West 167 7. The New Breed (Online) / Bridget Arnwine, Angelika Beener, and Anthony Dean-Harris 189 8. Anthology 209 Classics “Jazz and the White Critic,” LeRoi Jones (DownBeat, 1963) 209 “Requiem for a Heavyweight,” Marc Crawford (Transition, 1966) 216 “Inside the Horace Silver Quintet,” Barbara Gardner (DownBeat, 1963) 220 “Trane + 7 = a Wild Night at the Gate,” A. B. Spellman (DownBeat, 1965) 226 “The Testimony: An Interview with Alto Saxophonist Bunky Green,” Bill Quinn (DownBeat, 1966) 229 On Jazz and Race “Putting the White Man in Charge,” Stanley Crouch (JazzTimes, 2003) 236 “My Bill Evans Problem—Jaded Visions of Jazz and Race,” Eugene Holley Jr. (New Music Box, 2013) 238 “Where's the Black Audience?”, Ron Wynn (JazzTimes, 2013) 243 “Whither the Black Voices,” Anthony Dean-Harris (Nextbop, 2013) 249 “Brooklyn's Jazz Renaissance,” Robin D. G. Kelley (ISAM Newsletter, 2004) 251 Additional Ain’t But a Few of Us Contributors “Wynton Is the Greatest!,” Playthell Benjamin (Commentaries on the Times, 2016) 255 “Jazz Is . . . Free . . . ?,” Ron Welburn (The Grackle, 1976) 259 “Why Jazz Will Always Be Relevant,” Greg Tate (The Fader, 2016) 264 “Rhapsody in Rainbow: Jazz and the Queer Aesthetic,” John Murph (JazzTimes, 2010) 268 Black Musician Writers “Billy Taylor Replies to Art Tatum Critics,” Billy Taylor (DownBeat, 1955) 274 “Creativity and Change,” Wayne Shorter (DownBeat, 1968) 276 “An Artist Speaks Bluntly,” Archie Shepp (DownBeat, 1965) 286 “The Jazz Pianist-Purist,” Herbie Nichols (Rhythm, 1946) 288 “Smack! Memories of Fletcher Henderson,” Rex Stewart (DownBeat, 1965) 290 Index 299
£19.79
Duke University Press To Be Nsalas Daughter
Book SynopsisChérie N. Rivers shows how colonial systems of normalized violence condition the way we see and, through collaboration with contemporary Congolese artists, imagines ways we might learn to see differently.Table of ContentsPreface xvi 1. Elegy of Nsala 1 2. To See Nsala's Daughter 3 3. To Decompose 9 4. To Replicate 29 5. To Contradict 47 6. To Create 65 7. To Love Nsala's Daughter 81 Gratitude 89 Notes 93 Bibliography 99 Index 101 Illustration Credits 105
£17.09
Duke University Press Circuits of the Sacred
Book SynopsisDrawing on memoir, creative writing, theoretical analysis, and ethnography in Santo Domingo, Havana, and New Jersey, Carlos Ulises Decena examines transnational black Caribbean immigrant queer life and spirit.Table of ContentsGratitudes ix Part 0. Orígenes (Origins) Pensar Maricón (Faggotology): An Introduction 1 1. Re-membered Life: A Composition for Egun 23 Part I. Caminos 2. Bridge Crónica: A Triptych, with Elegguá 33 3. Experiencing the Evidence 57 Part II. Dos Puentes, Tránsitos 4. Loving Stones: A Transnational Patakí 81 5. ¡Santo! Repurposed Flesh and the Suspension of the Mirror in Santería Initiation 102 Part III. Trances 6. Indecent Conocimientos: A Suite Rasanblaj in Funny Keys 125 Epístola al Futuro/An Epistle to the Future 155 Notes 159 Bibliography 175 Index
£17.99
Duke University Press Archive of Tongues
Book SynopsisMoon Charania explores feminine dispossession and the brown diaspora through a reflection on the life of her mother, recovering otherwise silenced modes of brown mothers' survival, disobedience and meaning-making that are often only lived out in invisible, intimate spaces.Trade Review“Moon Charania’s rearticulations of the now-sedimented tropes of nation, gender, and patriarchy are very moving. I found myself with an entirely new set of questions about my own theorizing, feminism, and prejudices in regard to not only decolonial and gender studies, but my family history as well. While Archive of Tongues is deeply personal, it productively unsettles what much of Western feminism continues to take for granted, if not reify, about women in the Global South, Pakistani women, brown women, and migrant women. This book will be so important to feminist, decolonial, and transnational thinkers and writers as a coming-of-age feminist diasporic perspective on grappling with gendered and raced intergenerational trauma and violence.” -- Jasbir K. Puar, author of * The Right to Maim: Debility, Capacity, Disability *“Archive of Tongues is lively, taut, and wickedly smart. Moon Charania unflinchingly guides the reader through biographical, anecdotal, and theoretical interventions. The stakes of her project are major: the reorientation and decolonization of knowledge. Making tangible the depth and instability of bodily/lived knowledge, this compelling book will contribute to psychoanalysis, critical ethnic studies, women of color feminisms, queer studies, and affect studies.” -- Amber Jamilla Musser, author of * Sensual Excess: Queer Femininity and Brown Jouissance *Table of ContentsPreface ix Gratitudes xv Prologue xxi Introduction. A Story on Tongues 1 1. Abject Tongues 27 2. Forked Tongues 63 3. Promiscuous Tongues 89 4. The Other End of the Tongue 122 Afterword 139 Notes 143 Bibliography 155 Index 163
£18.99
Duke University Press Going Underground
Book SynopsisLara Langer Cohen excavates the long history of the underground in nineteenth-century US literature, showing how these formations of the underground can inspire new forms of political resistance.Table of ContentsAcknowledgments vii Introduction: A Basement Shut Off and Forgotten during the Nineteenth Century 1 1. The “Blackness of Darkness” in Mammoth Cave 25 2. Early Black Radical Undergrounds 46 3. The Underground Railroad’s Undergrounds 74 4. The Depths of Astonishment: City Mysteries and Subterranean Unknowability 104 5. “To Drop beneath the Floors of the Outer World”: Paschal Beverly Randolph’s Occult Undergrounds 133 6. Subterranean Fire: Anarchist Visions of the Underground 166 Epilogue: Staying Underground 198 Notes 205 Bibliography 245 Index 267
£19.94
Duke University Press Disappearing Rooms
Book SynopsisIn Disappearing Rooms Michelle Castañeda lays bare the criminalization of race enacted every day in US immigration courts and detention centers. She uses a performance studies perspective to show how the theatrical concept of mise-en-scène offers new insights about immigration law and the absurdist dynamics of carceral space. Castañeda draws upon her experiences in immigration trials as an interpreter and courtroom companion to analyze the scenography—lighting, staging, framing, gesture, speech, and choreography—of specific rooms within the immigration enforcement system. Castañeda’s ethnographies of proceedings in a “removal” office in New York City, a detention center courtroom in Texas, and an asylum office in the Northeast reveal the depersonalizing violence enacted in immigration law through its embodied, ritualistic, and affective components. She shows how the creative practices of detained and disappeared people liTrade Review"The book … is a quintessential one in times of increasing hatred towards immigrants. This timely book will help the reader understand the intensity of immigration crises and the need for the growth of a humanitarian world than a world with borders." -- T.S. Gangothri * Social Identities *Table of ContentsAcknowledgments ix Introduction 1 1. Removal Room: Disappearance and the Practice of Accompaniment 19 2. The Prison-Courtroom: No-Show Justice in Family Detention 56 3. Bring Me the Room: Tragic Recognition and the Right Not to Tell Your Story 91 Coda 129 Notes 135 References 159 Index 177
£18.99
Duke University Press The Latinx Guide to Graduate School
Book SynopsisIn The Latinx Guide to Graduate School Genevieve Negrón-Gonzales and Magdalena L. Barrera provide prospective and current Latinx graduate students in the humanities and social sciences fields with a roadmap for surviving and thriving in advanced degree programs.Table of ContentsAcknowledgments xi Introduction: You Thought You Were Buying a How-to Book but Ended Up Getting a Love Letter, Manifesto, and Flashlight 1 1. To Grad School or Not to Grad School? 23 2. Learning to Be a Grad Student 59 3. Essential Skills in Graduate School 77 4. Unwritten Rules of the Academy: Navigating the Gray Area 121 5. Navigating Professional Relationships in Graduate School 145 6. Navigating Personal Relationships in Graduate School 180 7. Life after Graduate School 205 Conclusion: Five Mandamientos for Remaking the Academy 224 UndocuGrads: Undocumeneted and Applying to Grad School (FAQs) / Carolina Valdivia 229 Glossary of Terms 233 Notes 237 Bibliography 243 Index 253
£18.89
Duke University Press Strolling in the Ruins
Book SynopsisFaith Smith examines everyday voices in Jamaica and Trinidad during the quiet period between the 1865 Morant Bay Rebellion and World War I in the British Caribbean's history to discern sentiments about empire and nationhood.Table of ContentsAcknowledgments ix Introduction. Introducing a Quiet Period 1 1. Cuba, South Africa, and the Anglophone Caribbean’s New Imperial Century 33 2. Ruination’s Intimate Architecture 68 3. Photography’s “Typical Negro” 118 4. Plotting Inheritance 144 Coda 186 Notes 191 Bibliography 229 Index 257
£18.89
Duke University Press Trafficking in Antiblackness
Book SynopsisIn Trafficking in Antiblackness Lyndsey P. Beutin analyzes how campaigns to end human trafficking—often described as “modern-day slavery”—invoke the memory of transatlantic slavery to support positions ultimately grounded in antiblackness. Drawing on contemporary antitrafficking visual culture and media discourse, she shows how a constellation of media, philanthropic, NGO, and government actors invested in ending human trafficking repurpose the history of transatlantic slavery and abolition in ways that undermine contemporary struggles for racial justice and slavery reparations. The recurring narratives, images, and figures such as “slavery in Africa,” “Arab slave traders,” and “Black incapacity for self-governance” discursively turn Black people across the diaspora into the enslavers of the past and present in place of white Americans and Europeans. Doing so, Beutin contends, creates a rhetorical defense against being Table of ContentsAcknowledgments ix Introduction 1 1. Reparations and the Rise of Antitrafficking Discourse 31 2. Blaming Black Mothers 61 Interlude: #FreeCyntoiaBrown 93 3. When Slavery’s Not Black 101 4. Deceptive Empiricism 133 Interlude: #Charlottesville 165 5. History Is Antiblackness 173 Afterword 193 Notes 197 Bibliography 237 Index 257
£19.94