Shanya Cordis, Maya J. Berry, Claudia Chávez Argüelle, Sarah Ihmoud, R. Elizabeth Velásquez EstraEmbodying Activist Research
Fugitive Anthropology
Embodying Activist Research
Herausgeber: Cordis, Shanya; Velásquez Estrada, R Elizabeth; Ihmoud, Sarah; Chávez Argüelles, Claudia; Berry, Maya J
Shanya Cordis, Maya J. Berry, Claudia Chávez Argüelle, Sarah Ihmoud, R. Elizabeth Velásquez EstraEmbodying Activist Research
Fugitive Anthropology
Embodying Activist Research
Herausgeber: Cordis, Shanya; Velásquez Estrada, R Elizabeth; Ihmoud, Sarah; Chávez Argüelles, Claudia; Berry, Maya J
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A personal, provocative, and boundary-breaking volume on the power relations that racialized, gendered, and sexualized researchers grapple with while conducting activist research.
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A personal, provocative, and boundary-breaking volume on the power relations that racialized, gendered, and sexualized researchers grapple with while conducting activist research.
Produktdetails
- Produktdetails
- Verlag: University of Texas Press
- Seitenzahl: 394
- Erscheinungstermin: 6. Januar 2026
- Englisch
- Abmessung: 229mm x 152mm x 30mm
- Gewicht: 568g
- ISBN-13: 9781477332740
- ISBN-10: 147733274X
- Artikelnr.: 73775634
- Herstellerkennzeichnung
- Libri GmbH
- Europaallee 1
- 36244 Bad Hersfeld
- gpsr@libri.de
- Verlag: University of Texas Press
- Seitenzahl: 394
- Erscheinungstermin: 6. Januar 2026
- Englisch
- Abmessung: 229mm x 152mm x 30mm
- Gewicht: 568g
- ISBN-13: 9781477332740
- ISBN-10: 147733274X
- Artikelnr.: 73775634
- Herstellerkennzeichnung
- Libri GmbH
- Europaallee 1
- 36244 Bad Hersfeld
- gpsr@libri.de
Shanya Cordis is a Black and Indigenous Warau/Lokono anthropologist and assistant professor of women, gender, and sexuality studies at Emory University. Maya J. Berry is a Black Cuban American anthropologist and assistant professor of African diaspora studies at the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill. Claudia ChÁvez ArgÜelles is a Mexican lawyer, anthropologist, and assistant professor of anthropology at Tulane University. Sarah Ihmoud is a Chicana Palestinian anthropologist and assistant professor of anthropology at the College of the Holy Cross. R. Elizabeth VelÁsquez Estrada is a Salvadoran Nicaraguan anthropologist and assistant professor of Latina/Latino studies and anthropology at University of Illinois, Urbana-Champaign.
* List of Illustrations
* Introduction (Shanya Cordis, Maya J. Berry, Claudia ChÁvez ArgÜelles,
Sarah Ihmoud, and R. Elizabeth VelÁsquez Estrada)
* Artist Statement, Soil (2016) (Courtney Desiree Morris)
* 1. The Gendered, Racial, and Violent Politics of Fieldwork (DÁna-Ain
Davis)
* 2. Fugitive Archaeology for Engaged Futures (Adriana MarÍa Linares
Palma)
* 3. Embodying Sites of Memory: Fugitive Spaces for Black Feminist
Community Histories (Cheryl R. Rodriguez)
* 4. Sanctuaries in Transit: Trans Migrant Fugitivity and the
Geographies of Survival (Koyana Flotte)
* 5. Fugitive Dreams from Fieldwork (Mis)Recognitions (Maya J. Berry)
* 6. Co-Sentipensar-Accionar: Moments of Truth, Radical Relationality,
and Fugitivity in the Field (Claudia ChÁvez ArgÜelles)
* 7. Fugitive Collaborative Research: Seeking Mutuality as Research
Accountability (R. Elizabeth VelÁsquez Estrada)
* 8. Grief and an Indigenous Feminist’s Rage: The Embodied Field of
Knowledge Production (Shannon Speed)
* 9. Feminist Ethnography in Contexts of Multiple Forms of Violence (R.
AÍda HernÁndez Castillo)
* 10. Feeling Grief in the Flesh: Toward an Emotionally Engaged
Research (Meztli Yoalli RodrÍguez Aguilera)
* 11. M’Shatateh Ethnography: Embodying the Palestinian Borderlands
(Sarah Ihmoud)
* 12. “Sigamos Parceira”: Politics of Fidelity to Black Mothers’
Epistemology of Antiblack Genocide (Luciane Rocha)
* 13. Fugitive Anthropology, Higher Education Administration, and
Interstitial Institutional Change (Edmund T. Gordon and Charles R.
Hale)
* 14. Accepting the Hatred: Quilombo Fugitivity and the
Extraterrestrial Imperative of (Gendered) Antiblackness (JoÃo H.
Costa Vargas)
* 15. How the River, It Flows: On Otherwise Fugitive Praxes and Calling
My Body Home (Shanya Cordis)
* Afterword: Cutting after Words (Joy James)
* Acknowledgments
* Index
* Introduction (Shanya Cordis, Maya J. Berry, Claudia ChÁvez ArgÜelles,
Sarah Ihmoud, and R. Elizabeth VelÁsquez Estrada)
* Artist Statement, Soil (2016) (Courtney Desiree Morris)
* 1. The Gendered, Racial, and Violent Politics of Fieldwork (DÁna-Ain
Davis)
* 2. Fugitive Archaeology for Engaged Futures (Adriana MarÍa Linares
Palma)
* 3. Embodying Sites of Memory: Fugitive Spaces for Black Feminist
Community Histories (Cheryl R. Rodriguez)
* 4. Sanctuaries in Transit: Trans Migrant Fugitivity and the
Geographies of Survival (Koyana Flotte)
* 5. Fugitive Dreams from Fieldwork (Mis)Recognitions (Maya J. Berry)
* 6. Co-Sentipensar-Accionar: Moments of Truth, Radical Relationality,
and Fugitivity in the Field (Claudia ChÁvez ArgÜelles)
* 7. Fugitive Collaborative Research: Seeking Mutuality as Research
Accountability (R. Elizabeth VelÁsquez Estrada)
* 8. Grief and an Indigenous Feminist’s Rage: The Embodied Field of
Knowledge Production (Shannon Speed)
* 9. Feminist Ethnography in Contexts of Multiple Forms of Violence (R.
AÍda HernÁndez Castillo)
* 10. Feeling Grief in the Flesh: Toward an Emotionally Engaged
Research (Meztli Yoalli RodrÍguez Aguilera)
* 11. M’Shatateh Ethnography: Embodying the Palestinian Borderlands
(Sarah Ihmoud)
* 12. “Sigamos Parceira”: Politics of Fidelity to Black Mothers’
Epistemology of Antiblack Genocide (Luciane Rocha)
* 13. Fugitive Anthropology, Higher Education Administration, and
Interstitial Institutional Change (Edmund T. Gordon and Charles R.
Hale)
* 14. Accepting the Hatred: Quilombo Fugitivity and the
Extraterrestrial Imperative of (Gendered) Antiblackness (JoÃo H.
Costa Vargas)
* 15. How the River, It Flows: On Otherwise Fugitive Praxes and Calling
My Body Home (Shanya Cordis)
* Afterword: Cutting after Words (Joy James)
* Acknowledgments
* Index
* List of Illustrations
* Introduction (Shanya Cordis, Maya J. Berry, Claudia ChÁvez ArgÜelles,
Sarah Ihmoud, and R. Elizabeth VelÁsquez Estrada)
* Artist Statement, Soil (2016) (Courtney Desiree Morris)
* 1. The Gendered, Racial, and Violent Politics of Fieldwork (DÁna-Ain
Davis)
* 2. Fugitive Archaeology for Engaged Futures (Adriana MarÍa Linares
Palma)
* 3. Embodying Sites of Memory: Fugitive Spaces for Black Feminist
Community Histories (Cheryl R. Rodriguez)
* 4. Sanctuaries in Transit: Trans Migrant Fugitivity and the
Geographies of Survival (Koyana Flotte)
* 5. Fugitive Dreams from Fieldwork (Mis)Recognitions (Maya J. Berry)
* 6. Co-Sentipensar-Accionar: Moments of Truth, Radical Relationality,
and Fugitivity in the Field (Claudia ChÁvez ArgÜelles)
* 7. Fugitive Collaborative Research: Seeking Mutuality as Research
Accountability (R. Elizabeth VelÁsquez Estrada)
* 8. Grief and an Indigenous Feminist’s Rage: The Embodied Field of
Knowledge Production (Shannon Speed)
* 9. Feminist Ethnography in Contexts of Multiple Forms of Violence (R.
AÍda HernÁndez Castillo)
* 10. Feeling Grief in the Flesh: Toward an Emotionally Engaged
Research (Meztli Yoalli RodrÍguez Aguilera)
* 11. M’Shatateh Ethnography: Embodying the Palestinian Borderlands
(Sarah Ihmoud)
* 12. “Sigamos Parceira”: Politics of Fidelity to Black Mothers’
Epistemology of Antiblack Genocide (Luciane Rocha)
* 13. Fugitive Anthropology, Higher Education Administration, and
Interstitial Institutional Change (Edmund T. Gordon and Charles R.
Hale)
* 14. Accepting the Hatred: Quilombo Fugitivity and the
Extraterrestrial Imperative of (Gendered) Antiblackness (JoÃo H.
Costa Vargas)
* 15. How the River, It Flows: On Otherwise Fugitive Praxes and Calling
My Body Home (Shanya Cordis)
* Afterword: Cutting after Words (Joy James)
* Acknowledgments
* Index
* Introduction (Shanya Cordis, Maya J. Berry, Claudia ChÁvez ArgÜelles,
Sarah Ihmoud, and R. Elizabeth VelÁsquez Estrada)
* Artist Statement, Soil (2016) (Courtney Desiree Morris)
* 1. The Gendered, Racial, and Violent Politics of Fieldwork (DÁna-Ain
Davis)
* 2. Fugitive Archaeology for Engaged Futures (Adriana MarÍa Linares
Palma)
* 3. Embodying Sites of Memory: Fugitive Spaces for Black Feminist
Community Histories (Cheryl R. Rodriguez)
* 4. Sanctuaries in Transit: Trans Migrant Fugitivity and the
Geographies of Survival (Koyana Flotte)
* 5. Fugitive Dreams from Fieldwork (Mis)Recognitions (Maya J. Berry)
* 6. Co-Sentipensar-Accionar: Moments of Truth, Radical Relationality,
and Fugitivity in the Field (Claudia ChÁvez ArgÜelles)
* 7. Fugitive Collaborative Research: Seeking Mutuality as Research
Accountability (R. Elizabeth VelÁsquez Estrada)
* 8. Grief and an Indigenous Feminist’s Rage: The Embodied Field of
Knowledge Production (Shannon Speed)
* 9. Feminist Ethnography in Contexts of Multiple Forms of Violence (R.
AÍda HernÁndez Castillo)
* 10. Feeling Grief in the Flesh: Toward an Emotionally Engaged
Research (Meztli Yoalli RodrÍguez Aguilera)
* 11. M’Shatateh Ethnography: Embodying the Palestinian Borderlands
(Sarah Ihmoud)
* 12. “Sigamos Parceira”: Politics of Fidelity to Black Mothers’
Epistemology of Antiblack Genocide (Luciane Rocha)
* 13. Fugitive Anthropology, Higher Education Administration, and
Interstitial Institutional Change (Edmund T. Gordon and Charles R.
Hale)
* 14. Accepting the Hatred: Quilombo Fugitivity and the
Extraterrestrial Imperative of (Gendered) Antiblackness (JoÃo H.
Costa Vargas)
* 15. How the River, It Flows: On Otherwise Fugitive Praxes and Calling
My Body Home (Shanya Cordis)
* Afterword: Cutting after Words (Joy James)
* Acknowledgments
* Index







