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BooksSeptember 19, 2022 • View in browserMiami, Chonga Girls, and Claiming an Aesthetics of ExcessAuthor Jillian Hernandez theorizes the intersecting formations of gender, class, and race in relation to the self-presentation of Black and Latina women and girls. | Alicia Eler Hernandez’s own voice most comes through when she discusses her background as the daughter of first-generation, working-class Cuban and Puerto Rican migrants raised in Latinx enclaves of West New York, New Jersey, and Miami. Much like the girls she works with through Women on the Rise!, the story begins and ends with the personal-as-political, the most potent perspective of all. Support Hyperallergic's independent journalismBecome a member today to help keep our reporting and criticism free and accessible to all. Become a MemberARTISTS & WRITERS New Book Asks, Why Do Artists Make Art?In no small feat, Why I Make Art condenses artists’ multifaceted, meandering spoken stories into lively, relatable narratives that draw the reader in. | Lauren Moya Ford The Conflicted Inner Life of a Queer Literary IconA reimagining of the life of renowned queer author Patricia Highsmith isn’t a tale of admiration or condemnation, but one about the complex nature of womanhood. | Ayoola Solarin In Lewis Warsh’s Poem Composed Over Many Decades, the Past Is Never Really PastMortality and memory are points of inquiry in this posthumous publication. | John Curley
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