New Books in Literary Studies

Jina B. Kim, "Care at the End of the World: Dreaming of Infrastructure in Crip-Of-Color Writing" (Duke UP, 2025)

Apr 12, 2025
Jina B. Kim, an Assistant Professor at Smith College and expert in feminist disability studies, discusses her upcoming book that introduces the crip-of-color critique. She examines how writers like Octavia Butler and Jesmyn Ward challenge traditional independence narratives by advocating for radical interdependency. Kim delves into the impacts of Hurricane Katrina on care discussions and critiques systemic inequalities in infrastructure. Through her analysis, she emphasizes the importance of community support systems and imagines new models of care rooted in reciprocity.
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ANECDOTE

Katrina's Impact on Kim

  • Jina B. Kim's perspective shifted dramatically after witnessing Hurricane Katrina's aftermath in 2005.
  • She saw how poor Black people were mistreated, which shaped her radical critique of care and infrastructure.
INSIGHT

Crip of Color Critique Unmasks Dependency

  • Crip of Color critique disrupts state myths that stigmatize dependency as parasitic.
  • It champions radical interdependency, affirming care networks that sustain vulnerable lives.
INSIGHT

Broad Concept of Infrastructure

  • Infrastructure in the book encompasses physical systems, welfare, and care labor, especially by women and people of color.
  • It also includes informal networks, showing who is enabled or disabled by these systems.
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