Michelle Chase
Latin American Studies Program Director
Biography
Faculty Bio
Michelle Chase is a historian of modern Latin America, specializing in twentieth-century Cuba. Her first book, Revolution within the Revolution (UNC Press, 2015), challenged standard assumptions about women’s top-down liberation within the Cuban Revolution by showing that women activists themselves pressed the revolutionary leadership for inclusion and redress. Her current research explores the transnational reverberations of the Cuban Revolution during the Cold War.
Recent publications include:
"Beyond the “Historiographical Monroe Doctrine”: The Latin American Left and the World," Latin American Research Review (forthcoming).
"Picturing Solidarity: Photography and Cuban Internationalism during the Vietnam War," Trans Asia Photography 13 (1) (2023).
“Contesting the Youngest Revolution: Cuban Anti-Communists and the Global Politics of Youth, 1960-1965.” Journal of Latin American Studies (November 2021).
“Hands Off Korea: Women’s Internationalist Solidarity and Peace Activism in Early Cold War Cuba.” Journal of Women’s History 32.3 (fall 2020): 64-88.
“Revolutionary Positions: Sexuality and Gender in Cuba and Beyond.” Radical History Review 2020: 136 (2020): 1-10 (with Isabella Cosse).
Education
PhD, New York University, 2010
History
Courses Taught
Past Courses
HIS 107: World Civilization I
HIS 108: World History After 1650
HIS 134: Modern Latin America
HIS 196: The US-Mexico Border
HIS 231: Latin Amer: Social Chnge & Rev
HIS 232: Caribbean America
HIS 240: The US-Mexico Border
HIS 247: The Global Cold War
HIS 499: Senior Year Experience in His