“Centering the voices and performances of funkeiras—Black and Brown favela performers—to examine embodied gender politics in Brazil, <i>Bitches Unleashed: Performance and Embodied Politics in Favela Funk</i> offers fresh and insightful ways to engage with racialized performances of femininity from the perspective of the Global South. Theoretically rich and methodologically sensitive, Moreira decenters white, Western epistemological frameworks to provide an important contribution to Communication, Cultural Studies, and Gender Studies. This is a timely and significant book!”—Gust A. Yep, Professor, Communication Studies Department, Graduate Faculty, Sexuality Studies Program, Faculty, Ed.D. Program in Educational Leadership, San Francisco State University
“<i>Bitches Unleashed: Performance and Embodied Politics in Favela Funk</i> represents truly cutting-edge, outstanding and groundbreaking scholarship in Critical Intercultural Communication Studies. Raquel Moreira demonstrates an intersectional, performative approach to study historically nuanced and culturally specific modes of gender, sexuality, and the body among Brazil’s favela funk performers who are mostly Black and brown singers in the age of globalization. The most significant aspect of this book is to unapologetically showcase the paradox of desire in performing hypersexualized feminine genders which are often controlled, disciplined, and surveilled by patriarchy, sexism, and heteronormativity.”—Shinsuke Eguchi, Associate Professor, Department of Communication & Journalism, University of New Mexico
“We want the (favela) funk! Gotta have that (favela) funk! Moreira, in <i>Bitches Unleashed</i>, dismantles Global North and White, U.S. centric perspectives of research by reconceptualizing systems of gender and sexuality through transfeminista formulations of agency. By focusing on structural change and decolonizing cisheteronormativity, the centering of people of color and travesti communication offers the reader powerful analyses of white feminist failures, coloniality, transgression, intersectionality, and critical qualitative methodologies.”—Robert Gutierrez-Perez, Assistant Professor, Editor, <i>Border-Lines: Journal of the Latino Research Center</i>, Department of Communication Studies, University of Nevada, Reno
List of Figures – Acknowledgements – Introducing Bitches Unleashed – Femininities, Agency, and White Feminist Failures – “I Don’t Depend on Men for Shit!”: Favela Funk as Industry and Funkeiras’ Autonomy – Femininities on Display: Transgression and the Body in Performance – Negotiated Femininities: Relationships with Men and Other Funkeiras – Anti- Blackness and Racial Consciousness among Funkeiras – “Sit Down and Observe Your Own Destruction, Macho!”: Travesti Performances in Favela Funk – Beyond Survival: Funkeiras, Embodied Politics, and the Future of Feminism – Index.
Produktdetaljer
Biografisk notat
Raquel Moreira (Ph.D., University of Denver) is Assistant Professor of Communication at Southwestern University. Her research focuses on the role of transgressive performances of femininities in the struggle against structural violence in Brazil. Moreira’s research has received the 2020 Monograph of the Year Award from NCA’s GLBTQ Communication Division and the 2017 Feminist Scholar of the Year from the Organization for Research on Women and Communication.