

Jina B. Kim, "Care at the End of the World: Dreaming of Infrastructure in Crip-Of-Color Writing" (Duke UP, 2025)
Apr 18, 2025
Jina B. Kim is an Assistant Professor at Smith College, specializing in feminist disability studies and queer-of-color critique. In a thought-provoking discussion, she introduces her concept of crip-of-color critique, emphasizing the power of dependency and interdependence in literature by marginalized writers. Kim highlights how these narratives challenge stereotypes surrounding social assistance while fostering new support systems. She envisions a future where care is redefined as essential and pleasurable, advocating for radical connections within communities.
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Katrina's Impact on Kim
- Jina B. Kim was deeply impacted by witnessing Hurricane Katrina's devastation in 2005 as a college student.
- The event revealed the cruel realities for poor Black survivors and shaped her radical political worldview.
Crip of Color Critique Method
- Crip of Color critique interrupts harmful state narratives denying care to vulnerable groups.
- It honors webs of dependency, promoting coalitions across disability, queer, and feminist of color politics.
Multiple Roles of Infrastructure
- Infrastructure includes both physical systems and social support networks performed by marginalized groups.
- Infrastructural violence is state-enabled racialized deprivation causing disability and death.