Relebohile Moletsane

“Departing from entrenched discourses on girlhood, Quantum Justice elegantly presents literature that is representative of the various contexts in which the featured girls reside while taking into consideration the historical, social, and normative contexts in which they live and learn. Endsley’s analysis simultaneously honors the girls’ voices and locates their productions within a framework of existing theory and literature.”

Relebohile Moletsane, University of Kwazulu-Natal, coeditor of Ethical Practice in Participatory Visual Research with Girls and Young Women in Rural Communities

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Morgan Toliver
Aria S. Halliday

“Crystal Leigh Endsley teaches us how to do multi-sited, multiethnic, and feminist ethnographic work through the self-created poetic narratives of girls across the world, while staying attentive to her own positionality, questions, assumptions, and fears. Robust and well-researched, Quantum Justice is a necessary read for any girlhood studies or hip-hop studies scholar.”

Aria S. Halliday, University of Kentucky, author of Buy Black: How Black Women Transformed US Pop Culture

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Morgan Toliver