“Brings together innovative analyses of a region rich with, and enriched by, politically relevant performance, while expanding the meaning of performance itself and situating it in critical scholarship. Bodies on the Front Lines illuminates the complex contexts and specificities of a range of feminist and queer(ed) performance within the larger goal of ‘decentering and decolonizing cultural narratives’ of a region where such performance makes visible — and challenges — gender-based, intersectional violences.”
— Elisabeth Jay Friedman, University of San Francisco
"[Bodies on the Front Line] was one of many excellent studies nominated, again demonstrating the high quality of research currently being produced by scholars in our community and focused on topics relating to Latin America and Latinos in the U.S. Among all the meritorious submissions, the selection committee was particularly impressed by the vibrant range of case examples offered across Latin America of the ongoing work of feminist, queer, and trans movements, and the contrastively hopeful perspectives they offer at a moment when these identities are so often under attack here in the U.S."— William M. LeoGrande Award for Best Book in Latin American or Latino Studies
"This book will be of particular interest to scholars and researchers in the fields of performance and gender in the Latin American context. The various authors do an especially impressive job establishing a multitude of connection points and suggesting fruitful dialogue with other productions, performances, and art pieces."— Marin Laufenberg, Hispania
“In short, the anthology deftly defines the contemporary field of Latin American and Caribbean feminist performance and its critique for an English-language audience, and will be of interest to scholars, students, and practitioners alike.”
— Jill Lane, Theatre Survey
“Introduces English-speaking readers to the rich panoply of political performances in Latin America with intersectional critiques of state violence toward women, queer and femme subjects, particularly those marked as indigenous or black, and introduces readers to feminist theorists from the global south. This is a truly excellent volume that stands alone, in being concerned with transfeminism and performance.”
— Patricia Ybarra, Brown University
"Editors Werth and Zien offer a valuable interdisciplinary collection on dramatic presentations of oppression and violence against women and the LGBTQ+ community and resulting political actions in Latin America and the Caribbean. In sum, this collection underlines the insistence of ignored and excluded groups on public visibility, even against daunting odds, and the dynamism of performance artistry in animating and strengthening political protest. Summing up: recommended." — CHOICE
“Bodies on the Front Lines works as a kaleidoscope that expands notions of feminism, its subjects, and the role feminism serves within broader politics. The collection provides a balanced account of feminist and queer/cuir works in Latin America and the Caribbean, their intersections and divergences, and their transversal organizing modalities at a moment in which intersectional feminisms in the region are leading the way toward sociopolitical transformation.”
— Marcela Fuentes, Northwestern University