Dante Furioso is an architect, writer, and educator. A doctoral candidate in the History and Theory of Architecture at Princeton University, his research examines the production of architecture as a social labor process. He is particularly interested in colonial and neocolonial historical contexts in Latin America and the Caribbean. His dissertation is on the nineteenth-century urbanization of Havana, Cuba through the lens of labor, race, and technical change. This fall he is a Visiting Assistant Professor teaching the history of architecture at Pratt Institute, in Brooklyn, NY.