Please join us for an engaging book discussion of the new edited volume, Fugitive Anthropology: Embodying Activist Research (University of Texas at Austin Press) with co-editors and co-authors Drs. Shanya Cordis, Maya J. Berry, Claudia Chávez Argüelles, Sarah Ihmoud, and R. Elizabeth Velásquez Estrada on April 16, 4-6PM Rita Anne Rollins Building 252. Fugitive Anthropology is a transnational, intergenerational engagement that extends feminist theory, ethnography, and politically engaged, collaborative research in new directions. Grounded in Black and Indigenous political struggles and committed to collective liberation, the volume reflects on what it means to navigate violent relations of power, systemic inequities, and current onslaughts shaping ethnographic field research and the US academy. Ultimately, Fugitive Anthropology argues that a feminist ethos—one that embraces embodied knowledges and fugitive sensibilities that emerge from the experiences of racialized women, queer, trans,