<p>"An ambitious work, <i>In the Break</i> shows that the classic opposition between singularity and totality is invalidated by black thought, history, life, and culture. <i>In the Break</i> is a truly original and inventive work that needs to be read and heard."âAvery Gordon, author of <i>Ghostly Matters</i></p>
<p>"Moten makes great sense of the authorâs complementary attractions of âsameâ and âchange.â"â<i>Rough Pages</i></p><p>"Fred Motenâs dynamic and ambitious <i>In the Break </i>explores the tension between jazzâs social and aesthetic dimensions as the animating force behind the music, contextualizing the avant-garde work of the 1960s within a narrative arc that encompasses the entire history of the African diaspora."â<i>American Quarterly</i></p><p>"The result of Motenâs work is always more than a performance, more than the aggregate of gestures that falls within the valorized space of performative writing: <i>In the Break</i> marks an event according to the terms with which Moten describes itâencounter, ensemble, improvisation, and the invocation of the knowledge of freedom."â<i>MLN</i></p><p>"Itâs a work that rewards careful study and repeated consultation, and invites extension, development, debate, and sustained intellectual improvisation on its protean themes."â<i>Cross Cultural Poetics</i></p><p>"<i>In the Break</i> mounts a poststructuralist assault upon the sovereign subject, disciplined sexuality, and gender training."â<i>American Literary History</i></p>