Fridays at Newcomb to host Bonnie Lucero for a talk on the Intersetion of Race and Gender in Cuba

Speaker/Performer Name
Bonnie Lucero
Uptown Campus
Other location info
Anna Many Lounge
Caroline Richardson Building
62 Newcomb Place
Tulane University

On Friday, February 16, join us in welcoming Bonnie A. Lucero, a Post-Doctoral Fellow in Law and Society at Newcomb College Institute, for a talk entitled, A Fatal Example for Slavery: Pregnancy, Race, and Legal Status in Late Colonial Cuba. Her research centers on the intersections of race and gender in Latin America, especially Cuba. She is co-editor of Voices of Crime: Constructing and Contesting Social Control in Modern Latin America. She is the author of two forthcoming monographs. Her first book, Revolutionary Masculinity and Racial Inequality: Gendering War and Politics in Central Cuba, 1895-1902, explores the ways Cuban soldiers employed ideas of masculinity to negotiate racial inequality at the turn of the twentieth century. Her second monograph, Geographies of Privilege and Power: A History of Racial Segregation in Cuban City (University of Alabama Press, forthcoming, 2018) examines the experiences of men and women of African descent in Cienfuegos, a city founded as a white colony, during the long nineteenth century. Her original scholarship also appears in journals and edited volumes in English and Spanish. Her new project, tentatively titled Malthusian Practices: A History of Pregnancy, Abortion, and Infanticide in Cuba since Colonial Times, examines how laws regulating women‘s reproduction historically perpetuated gender-specific forms of racial inequality since the eighteenth century. A native of Richmond, California, she earned her Ph.D. in History from the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill in 2013.

The lecture includes a free lunch and is open to the public.