"Sound is the ground for Ivįn Ramos's brilliant writing on visual art, performance, and subcultures that radiate out from Mexico, Los Angeles, and through the rest of Latina/o America. Ramos's sonic grounding, actual and conceptual, is far from stable. Records melt, checkpoints are refused, the inauthentic is genuine, geopolitical narratives shake, punk is a Latina/o given rather than a something taken. The castaways of neoliberalism are key protagonists. The illegible artists and audiences and the bootleg tapes that live and play in this indispensable book push Ramos towards transformative theories about performance and aesthetics. Readers will no doubt become forever altered having come to know them intimately through Ramos's beautiful treatise on unbelonging." - Alexandra Vazquez, New York University "A lucid and theoretically informed account of how listening practices between Mexico and the United States can work in opposition to the national popular and its regimes of affect. Unbelonging sets the record straight on whitewashed accounts of rock and punk that ignore how Latinx subjects took up subcultural spaces and stances. Taking time to 'feel brown' beyond the boundaries of race and nation, Ivįn Ramos delivers up a new and vibrant account of aesthetic dissensus that will forward queer-of-color critique." - Tavia Amolo Ochieng' Nyong'o, Yale University "In his gloriously cranky yet deeply moving book, the performance-studies scholar Ivįn A. Ramos invites us to relish in the dissonance of the punk, metal, and other 'inauthentic sounds' bootlegged and bartered in the marketplaces of Mexico City and beyond from the late 1980s to 2015... In the company of Chicana punks, queer performance artists, filmmakers, and disaffected Morrissey fans on both sides of the U.S.-Mexico border, Ramos gives us the space, time, and fortitude to not belong together." - Karen Tongson (The Chronicle of Higher Education)