"Gendered Aesthetics of Blackness models a strong decolonial practice. Highlighting Afro-Cuban female artists' methodological strategies and processes, Rosita Scerbo demonstrates their purposeful acts of activism and resistance. While attending to the nuances of geography, displacement, memory, and identity in their lives and work, Scerbo also draws important connections between artists on the island and in the diaspora, creating a rich transnational dialogue." — Lesley Feracho, author of Linking the Americas: Race, Hybrid Discourses, and the Reformulation of Feminine Identity"An essential contribution to Latin American and Caribbean studies, Latinx studies, visual art, and cultural studies. Gendered Aesthetics of Blackness sheds light on and amplifies the work of understudied and underrepresented artists from the intersectional standpoint of gender and race. Rosita Scerbo sets a new precedent for how decolonial academic research can be done." — Anastasia Valecce, author of Neorrealismo y cine en Cuba: Historia y discurso en torno a la primera polémica de la Revolución, 1951–1962