@article{Dahl_2018, title={The Latina Femme Promise of Vulnerability and Access: Review of Juana María Rodríguez, Sexual Futures, Queer Gestures, and Other Latina Longings (2014).}, volume={21}, url={https://www.lambdanordica.org/index.php/lambdanordica/article/view/543}, abstractNote={<p><em>Preview of the text:</em></p> <p>Can an encounter with an academic book feel like a deliciously queer one-night stand, outside of the confines of your semi-orderly life and leave you glowing with enthusiasm, satisfied, and yet eager for the promise of more? Can a review be an amorous gesture, a simple pleasurable yes? In the spirit of scholarly respectability, we tend to assume a review should involve some form of cooled off distance, a cautionary and critical no. Yet, if as Rita Felski (2015) contends, there are limits to critique, then a piece of (queer) scholarly writing, like a work of art, could move a reader beyond simple identification or recognition.</p&gt;}, number={1-2}, journal={lambda nordica}, author={Dahl, Ulrika}, year={2018}, month={Oct.}, pages={191-196} }