GSE Events

Dr. Amalia Dache, Assistant Professor of Education, will present a colloquium titled, "Homeland or Ocean: Ideological Dichotomies of Cuban Cultural Memory."

Add to Calendar Icon 2020-10-21 14:00 2020-10-21 14:00 15 Penn GSE Event: Dr. Amalia Dache, Assistant Professor of Education, will present a colloquium titled, "Homeland or Ocean: Ideological Dichotomies of Cuban Cultural Memory." Dr. Amalia Dache, Assistant Professor of Education, will present a colloquium titled, "Homeland or Ocean: Ideological Dichotomies of Cuban Cultural Memory."
Zoom
Megan McManus DD/MM/YYYY
Wednesday, October 21, 2020 - 2:00pm
ET
Zoom

Dr. Amalia Dache, Assistant Professor of Education, will present a colloquium titled, "Homeland or Ocean: Ideological Dichotomies of Cuban Cultural Memory." An Afro-Cuban American scholar, Amalia Dache is an assistant professor in the Higher Education Division. Her experiences as a Cuban refugee and student traversing U.S. educational systems—among them urban K–12 schools, community college, state college, and a private research-intensive university—inform her research and professional activities. Dr. Dache’s major research areas are postcolonial geographic contexts of higher education, Afro-Latina/o/xstudies, community and student resistance, and the college-access experiences of African diasporic students and communities. She is lead editor of Rise Up! Activism as Education, published in 2019 by Michigan State University Press. Her most recent article, “Ferguson’s Black radical imagination and the scyborgs of community–student resistance,” appeared in The Review of Higher Education in 2019. Dr. Dache was named a 2020 NAEd/Spencer Foundation Post-doctoral Fellow for her project, “Mapping Public Housing and Urban Higher Education Accessibility and Enrollment in Philadelphia.” In 2019, she completed Rockefeller Institute’s Richard P. Nathan Public Policy Fellowship where she conducted research on racial, transit, and economic factors inhibiting access to local postsecondary education in the Finger Lakes region of Upstate, New York.  She received the Association for the Study of Higher Education’s (ASHE) Bobby Wright Dissertation of the Year award in 2014.


Event Contact

Megan McManus
mcmmeg@upenn.edu