Lexington Books
Pages: 168
Trim: 6¼ x 9⅜
978-1-4985-2077-5 • Hardback • December 2016 • $103.00 • (£79.00)
978-1-4985-2078-2 • eBook • December 2016 • $97.50 • (£75.00)
Irune del Rio Gabiola is associate professor of Spanish and director of the Gender, Women, and Sexuality Studies Program at Butler University.
Contents
Introduction: Dismantling Cultural Paradigms in search of Inclusivity and Revolutionary Love
Puerto Rico
Chapter 1: Shame and Failure: Positive Narratives to Re/image Queer Identity in the
Transnational Puerto Rican Context
Chapter 2: A Queer Way of Family Life: Narratives of Time and Space in Mayra Santos-Febres’s Sirena Selena vestida de pena
Cuba
Chapter 3: Divas, Atrevidas y Entendidas; Cuban Hip Hop Group Krudas Cubensi ConQueering Love Across the Transnational Space
Chapter 4: Unbecoming Cuban-American: An Analysis of Cristy Road’s Graphic Narratives
The Dominican Republic
Chapter 5: Flexible Bodies in Cyberspace: Representations of Dominicanidad in the art of Raquel Paiewonsky
Chapter 6: The Lesbian Body as Home: Queering Dominican Women’s Experiences
Conclusion: Emancipatory Techniques in Contemporary Art in the Transnational Caribbean Context
References
About the Author
Irune del Rio Gabiola’s work analyzes the lesbian body as a site that re-envisions notions of un/becoming, queer family, space, and belonging. Drawing on Chela Sandoval’s ‘methodology of the oppressed,’ del Rio Gabiola carefully examines the work of Caribbean writers and artists and demonstrates how their particular representation of queer and transgendered bodies productively disrupts dominant notions of national identity and authority. This book brings together remarkable works from a diverse array of media (i.e. novel, graphic novel, hip hop, performance art) connected to their shared thematic attention to issues of gender, sexuality, and transnational mobility. del Rio Gabiola convincingly argues that these works, collectively, invite us to reimagine the power of the lesbian body.
— Dara E. Goldman, University of Illinois
Through centering queer bodies and experiences as a site of knowledge production, Resistant Bodies in the Cultural Productions of Transnational Hispanic Caribbean Women: Reimagining Queer Identity, is a welcomed addition to the emergent body of literature centered on the critical arts and social change.
— Tanya Saunders, Associate Professor of Latin American Studies, University of Florida
Scholar Irune del Rio Gabiola is best known for her queer feminist perspective and interdisciplinarity. In Resistant Bodies, a meticulous sociocultural contextualization supports the solid construction of densely theoretical arguments, interweaving themes of family/home, corporality, philosophy, shame, and pride. Analyzing diverse media from photography to hip-hop, del Rio Gabiola celebrates the transnational performative empowerment of queer women of the Spanish speaking Caribbean.
— Sara E. Cooper, California State University, Chico