Embodied Difference: Divergent Bodies in Public Discourse is a refreshingly interdisciplinary consideration of embodiment as a site of agency, oppression, and knowledge production. It is all too easy, in the face of Western societys enculturated somatophobia, to forget that our bodies are a matrix of sense receptors caught in a web of political constructs; that through the body we both experience and are experienced by the world. As such, the body is intrinsic to the formation of self, other, community, and culture. This text incites a welcome and timely discourse, which honors our lived experience, by making explicit the connections between our corporeal flesh and our cultural foundations. -- Catherine Cabeen, Marymount Manhattan College While intersectional feminist theory has captured the attention of numerous scholar/activists throughout the U.S. academy and beyond, rarely has it been so brilliantly operationalized as is the case in this cross-disciplinary, co-edited anthology. The broad range of themes is breathtaking scientific racism, transfeminism, American dance, urban development/gentrification, sci-fi films, right-to-die cases, Gray's Anatomy, the relentlessness of racial inequality. Professors Jamie A. Thomas and Christina Jackson have assembled a diverse group of experts whose provocative explorations of the causes and consequences of social inequality over time make visible in new ways the challenges and dangers we now face in the aftermath of a deeply polarizing 2016 Presidential election. -- Beverly Guy-Sheftall, Anna J. Cooper Professor of Comparative Womens Studies at Spelman College and co-author of GENDER TALK: THE STRUGGLE FOR WOMENS EQUALITY IN AFRICAN AMERICAN COMMUNITIES