Vanessa Díaz is Associate Professor of Chicana/o and Latina/o Studies at Loyola Marymount University and the author of Manufacturing Celebrity: Latino Paparazzi and Women Reporters in Hollywood.
Petra R. Rivera-Rideau is Associate Professor of American Studies at Wellesley College and the author of Remixing Reggaetón: The Cultural Politics of Race in Puerto Rico and Fitness Fiesta! Selling Latinx Culture Through Zumba, both also published by Duke University Press.
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Introduction. "?Quien Tu Eres?": Understanding Bad Bunny and Resistance in Puerto Rico 1 1. Las Cosas Estan Empeorando: Puerto Rico in the Era of "Soy Peor" 14 2.?"Estamos Bien"? Hurricane Maria and Unnatural Disaster in Puerto Rico 37 3. "El Pueblo No Aguanta Mas Injusticia": Bad Bunny and el Verano Boricua 59 4. "?Por Que No Puedo Ser Asi?": Bad Bunny and Gender Politics 80 5. "El Mundo es Mio": Bad Bunny Beyond el Borinquen 107 6. "Puerto Rico Esta Bien Cabron": The Party Is the Protest 129 7. Singing in Non-English: Bad Bunny Lost in Translation 156 8. "Nunca Antes Hubo Uno Como Yo": Bad Bunny, Coachella, and Latino Belonging in the United States 179 9. "Prende una Velita": Continued Hope, Continued Resistance 200 Conclusion. "Seguimos Aqui" 220 Acknowledgments 231 Notes 235 Bibliography 287 Index
“In P FKN R, Díaz and Rivera-Rideau enlist Bad Bunny’s art to expose the layered crises facing Puerto Rico and their roots in U.S. colonial rule. Drawing on interviews with artists, producers, and industry insiders, they show how he transforms grief and pride into a sonic archive of resistance. The result is a powerful meditation on the stakes of his artistry, his platform, and the future he dares us to imagine.”—Yarimar Bonilla, author of, Non-Sovereign Futures: French Caribbean Politics in the Wake of DIsenchantment
"Did somebody say a book about Bad Bunny? And right before his half-time performance at the Super Bowl? Yes please. An examination of Benito and both his performance of politics and his politics as performance. This is the kind of cultural analysis that makes my heart sing. Well anything that has to do with Bad Bunny makes my heart sing."—Traci Thomas, She Reads
"An insightful consideration of the rapper’s significance and the many ways art can serve as protest."—Publishers Weekly
"Díaz and Rivera-Rideau create an impressive, meticulously researched study of an often-misunderstood artist."—Lisa Henry, Library Journal
"The work that Díaz and Rivera-Rideau have put into understanding Benito feels increasingly necessary, especially as his celebrity and political sway continue to balloon. . . . P FKN R emphasizes listening to Bad Bunny as a radical act, connecting us with the centuries-long struggle and ongoing resistance of the Puerto Rican people."—Reanna Cruz, Washington Post
"This is the rare academic book you can read without a highlighter."—Marisa Maldonado, Latina Media

