Department of Languages, Literatures and Cultures
Our People
Benjamin Garcia Egea
| Title: | Senior Instructor of Spanish | 
| Department: | Languages, Literatures & Cultures College of Arts and Sciences | 
| Email: | bg1@email.sc.edu | 
| Office: | J. Welsh Humanities Office Building 609 | 

Education
University of South Carolina; Columbia, SC (August 2014 - May 2018)                       
                              
                              Doctoral Degree in Spanish (Ph.D.)        
                              
                              University of South Carolina; Columbia, SC (August 2014 - May 2016)                       
                              
                              Women’s and Gender Studies Certificate 
                              
                              West Virginia University; Morgantown, WV (August 2008 - May 2010)                       
                              
                              Master of Arts in Foreign Languages, Major in Spanish, and Minor in TESOL 
                              
                              Birmingham University; Birmingham, United Kingdom (September 2005 - July 2006)
                              
                              Awarded Erasmus scholarship to study abroad
                              
                              University of Murcia; Murcia, Spain (September 2003 - July 2008)                      
                              
                              Bachelor’s Degree and M.A. in English Language, Literature and Culture
                              
                              Bio
Originally from Murcia, Spain, Benjamin Garcia Egea moved to the United States in
                                 2008. He has an M.A. in Spanish and TESOL from West Virginia University, and he also
                                 received a Doctoral degree in Spanish (2014-2018) and a Certificate in Women’s and
                                 Gender Studies, both from the University of South Carolina.
                              
                              His dissertation was entitled: “Estrategias feministas y el avance de la mujer en
                                 la España del siglo XIX: Prensa y librepensamiento” (Feminist Strategies and the Advancement
                                 of Women in 19th-Century Spain: Press and Freethinking). His doctoral research centers
                                 on three women writers, whose works in periodicals contributed to the rise of feminism
                                 in Spain: Cándida Sanz, Rita Arañó and Isabel Peña. These Spanish authors from lower-middle
                                 classes were promoting freethinking, secular education, and equal rights for women
                                 in the press in the 1870s. The main purpose of his investigation is to give well-deserved
                                 recognition to these women and their historically marginalized voices.
                              
                              Furthermore, Benjamin Garcia Egea has taught all levels of Spanish courses as well
                                 as Hispanic literature and culture courses at three major and diverse universities:
                                 West Virginia University (2008-2010), Marshall University (2010-2014) and the University
                                 of South Carolina (2014-2022).
                              
                              Benjamin has been an Instructor of Spanish at the University of South Carolina since
                                 2014, first as a graduate teaching assistant, and then promoted in 2018 to full-time
                                 instructor. He is currently serving as the SPAN 209 (Intermediate Spanish I) and SPAN
                                 210 (Intermediate Spanish II) Coordinator, in charge of coordinating and creating
                                 materials for all instructors teaching these courses. Currently, Garcia Egea teaches
                                 Spanish language courses, especially at the 100-300 levels.