In this podcast, Michael Watts interviews Rebecca Herman, Assistant Professor of History, UC Berkeley.
Professor Herman's research and writing examine modern Latin American history in a global context.
Her first book, forthcoming from Oxford University Press, reconstructs the history of U.S. military basing in Latin America during World War II – through high diplomacy and on-the-ground examinations of race, labor, sex and law – to reveal the origins and impact of inter-American “security cooperation” on domestic and international politics in the region. She has also authored past and forthcoming articles and book chapters on the global politics of anti-racism, the Cuban literacy campaign, the Brazilian labor justice system, and U.S.-Latin American relations.
She is currently working on a new book project on Antarctica, Latin America, and the World.
Prior to entering academia, she spent several years in Argentina, Chile, Bolivia and Brazil working as a freelance translator, researcher, and documentarian. Before joining the faculty at Berkeley, she was Assistant Professor of International Studies and Latin American Studies at the University of Washington, Seattle.
She received her Ph.D. in History from UC Berkeley and her B.A. in Literature and History from Duke.
A transcript of this interview is available at: https://matrix.berkeley.edu/research-article/matrix-podcast-interview-with-rebecca-herman/