"Jossianna Arroyo offers a magistral deconstruction of 21st-century forms of necropolitics insidiously wielded via Twitter, Youtube, Instagram, Facebook, TikTok, and other digital platforms; television; and literary and cinematic production. With sophisticated straightforwardness, Arroyo compels us to critically look at the too-familiar imagery accompanying the invention and reproduction of Caribbean otherness across centuries and nations."
— Odette Casamayor-Cisneros, associate professor of Latin American and Caribbean Literatures and Cultures, University of Pennsylv
"Caribes 2.0 is an invitation to understand the Caribbean beyond the notion of spectacle as entertainment and ruination. . . . It is a significant contribution to analyzing the Transnational Hispanic Caribbean through media, not only traditional hegemonic media but also emerging media and more participatory diffusion technologies such as the internet."— New West Indian Guide
"A compelling collection for any scholar intrigued by the contemporary media landscape of the Caribbean. [It] offers a deep dive into the mediascapes and media flow within and across the Spanish Caribbean and its diasporas, enriching the reader's understanding of cultural interplay and communication more generally. Arroyo-Martínez's contribution stands out, too, for its foresight, competently laying the foundation around which future scholars will rally as they navigate the evolving narrative of a Caribes 3.0 engaged with burgeoning technologies like the metaverse and artificial intelligence. In sum, this book is an essential read for anyone invested in the intersection of Caribbean studies and visual culture."— Centro Journal
"Caribes 2.0 offers canny insight into the logics of visibility, performance and politics that blossom in the mediascapes of a globalized Caribe. Refusing easy takes, the book tracks the afterlives of slavery and ongoing anti-Black racism as they morph and reassemble in twenty-first-century Caribbean media. Moving seamlessly between TikTok and Televisa, Santo Domingo and Orlando, Arroyo offers fascinating readings of what 'viral' racial images and outlaw performativity reveal about neoliberal codes for self-making—and their refusal."
— Rachel Price, associate professor of Spanish and Portuguese, Princeton University
"Focusing on the complexities behind Caribbean mediascapes, Jossianna Arroyo's Caribes 2.0 represents an important and timely contribution to Caribbean, Latin American, Latinx, Afro-diasporic, media, and cultural studies. This provocative study does not shy away from addressing controversial topics (such as blackface) or lesser-known figures and cultural products, thus offering us a blueprint for engaging in the critical analysis of various forms of cultural expression, even those that have not been traditionally considered 'worthy' of academic attention because of race or class origins."
— Latino Studies
"Breaks new theoretical and methodological ground in the study of new Latinx media and contemporary Caribbean culture. . . . Arroyo lucidly foregrounds the ways in which the body provides a means of self-affirmation, and alternately, defiance against disaster politics, pushing against racial, class, and gender boundaries. Richly illustrated with color photographs and frame grabs, her book delineates a new zone of media understanding, theorization, and appreciation."— Symposium: A Quarterly Journal in Modern Literatures
"Jossianna Arroyo's Caribes 2.0 brings a variety of understudied sources to light, providing a fruitful addition to media scholarship and Caribbean studies. Most strikingly, her work forms part of a wave of Caribbean scholarship that regards the visual prominence of Black and brown death and precarity in processes of racialization. Caribes 2.0 will prove especially useful to researchers of contemporary Caribbean cultural production and virtual economies."— Film Quarterly