Rachel Kuo is Assistant Professor of Gender and Women's Studies and Asian American Studies at the University of Wisconsin-Madison. She is a co-founder of the Asian American Feminist Collective and founding member of the Center for Critical Race and Digital Studies. Her writing and commentary on race and politics has been published in several academic journals, including Journal of Communication; Media, Culture and Society; New Media and Society; Political Communication; and Frontiers: A Women's Studies Journal. Kuo's work has also been featured in The New York Times, CNN, NBC, NPR, and Teen Vogue.
IMovement Media is a powerfully nuanced and accessible read that reveals the ways social justice solidarities solidify. Rachel Kuo's grounded investigations of the material that move our movements ask us to reconsider the processes and products of our collective organizing, with attention toward the movement media that bring us together, as well as their complicity in our oppression. Kuo centers Asian and Black women organizers and the different banners under which they forged often tenuous solidarities, showing both the strength and weaknesses of these bonds across time and technologies, while simultaneously leaving open the door to new possibilities for Movement Media magic. * Moya Bailey, Author of Misogynoir Transformed: Black Women's Digital Resistance * This book offers an insightful and badly needed analysis of how progressive social movements are built under conditions of constant surveillance and instability. Kuo reminds us that our technologies and infrastructures have always been compromised-the same tech that supposedly protects freedom also undermines it-but that it's from this compromised position that we can imagine something different. At a time when things seem overwhelming, she reminds us that by reflecting and analyzing movement media, we can build collectives and open future possibilities. Brilliant. A must read. * Wendy Hui Kyong Chun, Author of Discriminating Data: Correlation, Neighborhoods, and the New Politics of Recognition * Movement Media is a monumental work that traces the last fifty years of social movement organizing in the United States and the theories and practices of solidarity through difference innovated by these movements. Mobilizing a stunning array of archival, ethnographic, and cultural 'media' sources, Kuo tracks the largely unappreciated technical, administrative, and reproductive labor that makes movements possible in the face of both repressive and co-optive state violence. Kuo's innovative and original methodology thus unearths a discontinuous genealogy of Third World and women of color feminist movement practices that would otherwise be impossible to trace. * Grace Kyungwon Hong, Author of Death beyond Disavowal: The Impossible Politics of Difference *