Multiple Cultural Perspectives
What follows is a few examples of the ways I engaged with multiple cultural perspectives throughout my Div II.
I examined race and class throughout Div II, especially in how it relates to the dance world and my dance practices. The piece I worked on as a part of Deb Goffe’s repertory work in fall 2019 also speaks to engaging on a personal level with these politics. During this time I thought a lot about how I can support Black space in my own dance and dances.
During the class Critical Moves in the fall of 2019 I did a lot of engaging with multiple perspectives in the dance world. A lot of the discussions we had in class focused on various makers in the field who were using dance as a form of protest. We had only just begun exploring this rich topic when the semester was over, but it was a practice that I plan to carry through my Div III as well as the rest of my life. Watching dance is such a wonderful way to engage in difference because it humanizes us when we have been taught to other people who aren’t like us. Writing about dance and using dance to understand protest, resistance, and struggle was a huge part of my Div II that I again, hope to carry forward throughout the rest of my life.
I tried to engage race class and power in science as well, through my own research. In conversations with my lab mates we discussed how STEM can be inaccessible to marginalized groups. We examined our own tendencies towards self doubt and how that can be a conditioned response. At the ASCB/EMBO conference, my lab partner Helen and I attended different workshops and discussion sessions centering POC in STEM as well as queer folks in STEM. We also attended a session on the importance of title IX coordination in grad school. These talks were easy to critique because they centered a very overtly competitive version of science-- one that at Hampshire there is just no room for. I would argue that if competition is the main structure at work, then equity is never going to be a reality. But they got the conversations started for us.
A text that stood out to me in this research is The Immortal Life of Henrietta Lacks, which chronologies the story of a Black woman whose cells were stolen from her in the name of science. Because of their mutation, her cancer cells are useful in lab research, and HeLa cells are very common in the college and university level lab. None of her family has been compensated for her contributions to biology research, or even gotten profit from this book or the HBO movie made about her life.
Again, this research is never over and this is only the tip of the iceberg. What follows is a collection of my work that engaged multiple cultural perspectives.














