Natalia Dame
Assistant Professor of Russian
- Office: USF Tampa CPR 431
Dr. Natalia Dame is an Assistant Professor of Russian in the Department of World Languages
at USF. She received her Ph.D. in Slavic Languages and Literatures from the University
of Southern California (2016) and her MA in TESOL from Lipetsk State Pedagogical University
in Russia (2001). Her research investigates intersections between gender, politics,
and art in Russian literature and culture from the 19th century to the present. She
examines the changing perception of women in late nineteenth- and early twentieth-century
Russian literature and culture with a focus on revolutionary martyr-heroines. Her
other scholarly and teaching interests include visual studies, Russian cultural history,
heritage language learners, and inclusive pedagogy.
Dr. Dame has published articles on class and species violence in Bulgakov, on music
and women in Tolstoy, on Russian intertexts in Nabokov鈥檚 Lolita, and on the perceptions of authenticity in Russian heritage language teaching practices.
Her current book project, 鈥淭he Martyr-Heroine in Russia鈥檚 Public Imagination,鈥 analyzes
the destabilizing effect of the revolutionary martyr-heroine on literary portrayals
of women in fin-de-si猫cle Russian fiction. Her other two projects investigate the
battle between tsarist censorship and Russian satirical press in the historical context
of 1905-1906 and the use of female images as a political allegory in the Russian Satirical
Journals of 1905-1906.
Dr. Dame鈥檚 teaching experience is wide-ranging and diverse, and her teaching approach
is student-centered and holistic. She aims to create a situation of success for each
student by facilitating a supportive, engaging, and inclusive learning environment.
Dr. Dame has taught English and Russian language, literature, and culture classes
in the Czech Republic, Morocco, Russia, Ukraine, and the USA. While in the USA, she
taught at Pomona College, Beloit College, and the University of Southern California.
Some of her favorite classes to teach include Gender and Sexuality in Russian Culture,
Modern Russian Culture, Nineteenth- and Twentieth-Century Russian Literature, Russian
Prison Camp Literature, Russian Thought and Civilization, Revolutionary Russia, Women
in Russian Culture, and Tolstoy.