Angela Leocata

Lecturer on Social Studies
First-Generation Outreach Liaison
Headshot of Angela Leocata
William James Hall 336
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A sociocultural anthropologist, Angela Leocata is a Lecturer on Social Studies and First-Generation Outreach Liaison. Her work examines the embodied experience of gendered labor and inequality, bringing labor theory to bear on questions of gender, the body, and care. 

Her current book project traces migration between Massachusetts, United States, and Minas Gerais, Brazil, to explore how migrant mothers navigate lives shaped by underemployment and generational immobility. Drawing on twenty-four months of ethnographic fieldwork across both regions, the book investigates how migration from Brazil’s emigrant interior is intimately shaped by intergenerational experiences of gendered labor and inherited forms of racialized subemprego (“underemployment”). It considers how underemployment is lived not merely as a labor condition but as a gendered, generational, and deeply embodied experience, particularly among women who navigate its bodily injuries, emotional weight, and social devaluation. 

Prior to this project, Angela conducted ethnographic research on maternal depression and experience in the Lusophone context of Goa, India. She received a Ph.D. in Anthropology from Stanford University, where she was a Fulbright-Hays Fellow, and an A.B., summa cum laude, in Anthropology from Harvard University.