
New Books Network Danielle Bainbridge, "Currencies of Cruelty: Slavery, Freak Shows, and the Performance Archive" (NYU Press, 2026)
Apr 3, 2026
Danielle Bainbridge, Assistant Professor of Theatre at Northwestern who studies performance, archives, and the intersections of enslavement and disability. She traces conjoined twins Millie Christine McKoy and Chang and Eng Bunker through freak show circuits. The conversation probes archival practices, spectacle, bodily value, and the ethics of displaying disturbing historical images.
AI Snips
Chapters
Books
Transcript
Episode notes
Archive Encounter That Sparked The Book
- Danielle Bainbridge discovered Millie Christine McCoy as a graduate student when a carte de visite photograph in the Yale archive captivated her and motivated the project.
- That single archival encounter expanded into research showing the McCoys were born into slavery and performed into the 20th century.
Performance Framed As Labor Extraction
- Bainbridge reframes performance as labor, arguing sideshow acts functioned as another form of extraction against Black people.
- She connects stage labor to plantation and domestic extraction to highlight continuity across enslavement and entertainment.
Turning Archive Into Performance Curio
- Bainbridge created Curio, a performance and short film, to 'put this performance on its feet' and enliven archival materials about the McCoys.
- She used her theatre background to translate documents into live and filmed modes that foreground liveness absent from the archive.

