“Zoetropes and the Politics of Humanhood embodies the future of rhetorics of science, technology and medicine for the ways it thoughtfully connects rhetorical theory with foundational texts across disciplines and for its methodological and critical nuance. Offering rhetorical scholars a suite of constructs that can be mobilized in a range of projects, each of the book’s case studies … are rich inquiries into what Rowland elegantly refers to as ‘body-forging that occurs in the crucible of empire.’” —Selection Committee, 2021 Association for the Rhetoric of Science, Technology, and Medicine Book Award
“Zoetropes and the Politics of Humanhood does a masterful job of weaving together health rhetorics, citizenship, race, gender, and sexuality. … Although her major intervention is theoretical, Rowland’s autoethnographic methodology throughout her case studies lends an approachability to the book and demonstrates the everyday nature of zoetropes. … A marvel for rhetorical theory, necropolitics, and those invested in the hierarchical nature of life.” —Michael J. Benjamin, Rhetoric Review
“Through insightful and thought-provoking engagements with a variety of sites and texts, Zoetropes shows the promise of scholarly work at the intersection of rhetoric and biopolitics. From a brilliant reading of the history of rhetoric to the unpacking of the work of zoetropes in the everyday encounter with biopower, this books gives us an explanation of biopower as a rhetoric, and so a way to think creatively of contesting its reach.” —Kelly E. Happe