"It's not often that one gets to read something that builds so beautifully and interdisciplinarily on the theoretical areas with which one has been engaged while also inspiring new directions for thought and action. Defending Rumba in Havana is analytically exciting and methodologically caring, offering new avenues for fruitfully engaging the embodied formulation of life otherwise in the wake of both the plantation and the revolutionary state."–Deborah A. Thomas, author of "Political Life in the Wake of the Plantation: Sovereignty, Witnessing, Repair"