Infamous Bodies is required reading for scholars of black feminist theory. This ambitious, provocative book interrogates female celebrity as a crucial genre through which black women come into political view. Samantha Pinto's careful and thoughtful wrestling with black women celebrities who have becomeor perhaps always weredifficult in and for black feminist studies requires that scholars probe the very meaning of the political for black feminist thought. Black feminist theory will be both challenged and transformed by Pinto's careful and counterintuitive readings of black women's representation and by Pintos call for the necessary centrality of vulnerability to our scholarly and political work. -- Jennifer C. Nash, author of * Black Feminism Reimagined: After Intersectionality *
With theoretical innovation and a commitment to bringing to light forgotten cultural moments, Samantha Pinto considers notorious figures of black female historical celebrity for what they can tell us about the limits of liberal humanist conceptions of freedom, agency, and consent. Fueled by a powerful sense of urgency, Pintos rich and valuable contribution pushes black studies and feminist and queer studies of representation and history to new places while prompting readers to think about how celebrity culture continues to treat black women with the broadest strokes. -- Francesca T. Royster, author of * Sounding Like a No-No: Queer Sounds and Eccentric Acts in the Post-Soul Era *
"[A] must-have counterintuitive, historical analysis. . . .The book is well written . . .and would be ideal for the following departments: sociology, women's studies, and African American studies. The book would pair well with the following courses: women authority and power, women's right and status; and feminism." -- Shauntey James * Ethnic and Racial Studies *
This excellent text is a must read for those studying cultural and Black feminist representations to understand how those that proliferated in the past inform contemporary debates related to '[B]lack womens sexual, embodied visibility as always politically suspect.'" -- C. B. Regester * Choice *
"Pintos work is skilfully crafted. . . . With a theoretical focus of Black feminism, structured through a framework of human rights discourse, and with a call to reframe Black feminist thought and historiography, Pintos work offers scholars new possibilities for asking different questions of our material and the way in which we see, read and write about them." -- Rebecca J. Fraser * European Journal of American Culture *
"Infamous Bodies feels acutely timely. Dense with citation and conceptual triangulation, Pintos is an up-to-date intervention rooted in the history of the field. There are many potential audiences for this textwithin literary studies, media studies, sexuality studies, and political theorybut any feminist scholar keeping abreast of contemporary debates will find something of interest here." -- Deborah Thurman * Year's Work in Critical and Cultural Theory *
"Infamous Bodies is a generative contribution to the field of Black feminist theory, particularly for scholars interested in the early intersections of contracts, labor, and international human rights. This is also an insightful text for practitioners of art criticism and performance theory." -- Margarita Lila Rosa * The Black Scholar *
"Pinto offers new radical political futures for black feminist studies. . . .She adds to existing critical human rights scholarship on vulnerability with a novel reconfiguration of what agency and freedom look like." -- Marietta Kosma * US Studies Online *
"Pintos is an innovative study which expands upon the contemporary discourses central to black feminist scholarship and will likely become an essential read in its field." -- Laura Skinner * Journal of Gender Studies *