Introduction
In the interest of unifying the online presence of the journal Human Architecture: Journal of the Sociology of Self-Knowledge (ISSN # 1540-5699), its Scholarworks platform has been discontinued as of Oct. 15, 2020, and is being redirected as follows. The full free-access contents of the journal can be, as in the past, accessed directly by visiting the journal’s primary publication platform at https://www.okcir.com which is the homepage of the research center publishing the journal, OKCIR: Omar Khayyam Center for Integrative Research in Utopia, Mysticism, and Science (Utopystics). All download links of individual articles on the Scholarworks platform of the journal will direct to the corresponding issue of the journal from where further action can be taken to access the articles.
Editor's Notes
Editor’s Note: Re-Membering Anzaldúa
Mohammad H. Tamdgidi
Articles
The Unbordered Borders
Winston Langley
From Borderlands and New Mestizas to Nepantlas and Nepantleras: Anzaldúan Theories for Social Change
AnaLouise Keating
Epistemologies of the Wound: Anzaldúan Theories and Sociological Research on Incest in Mexican Society
Gloria González-López
The Struggle for Language Rights: Naming and Interrogating the Colonial Legacy of "English Only"
Lilia I. Bartolomé
Cynthia Enloe Student Roundtable: “What International Feminist Activists Have Contributed to Anti-Militarist Social Theorizing”
Sarah Taylor Crockett, Amanda Bock, Caroline Hardy-Fanta, and Amanda Witbeck
Constructing Mestiza Consciousness: Gloria Anzaldúa’s Literary Techniques in Borderlands/La Frontera—The New Mestiza
Tereza Kynclová
Translating Borders, Performing Trans-nationalism
Paola Zaccaria
How to Tame a Wild Tongue: Language Rights in the United States
Panayota Gounari
Exploring Gloria Anzaldúa’s Methodology in Borderlands/La Frontera—The New Mestiza
Jorge Capetillo-Ponce
... y no se lo tragó la tierra: A Bilingual Analysis in Terms of Mikhail Bakhtin’s “Discourse in the Novel”
Haroldo Fontaine
Mentoring on the Borderlands: Creating Empowering Connections Between Adolescent Girls and Young Women Volunteers
Ruth Nicole Brown
Globalization and the Secularization of Immigration Policy: Competing Influences on Immigrant Integration Policy in Germany, France, Britain and the United States
Pamela Irving Jackson and Roderick Parke
Nepantlera-Activism in the Transnational Moment: In Dialogue with Gloria Anzaldúa’s Theorizing of Nepantla
Kavitha Koshy
Reaching Across No-Man’s-Land: The Israeli/Palestinian Conflict in Yuli Cohen-Gerstel’s Film, My Terrorist
Linda Dittmar
Writing Queer Across the Borders of Geography, Desire, and Power
Miguel Malagreca
On Skin as Borderlands: Using Gloria Anzaldúa’s New Mestiza to Understand Self-Injury Among Latinas
Gabriela Sandoval
Facing Our Dragons: Spiritual Activism, Psychedelic Mysticism and the Pursuit of Opposition
Michelle Corbin
Anzaldúa’s Sociological Imagination: Comparative Applied Insights into Utopystic and Quantal Sociology
Mohammad H. Tamdgidi
Moderator Commentary: Not Just Surviving but Fully Relishing the Borderlands, Defiantly and Triumphantly
Rajini Srikanth
Global Feminism: Feminist Theory’s Cul-de-sac
Elora Halim Chowdhury
Introduction: This Bridge We Are Building: “Inner Work, Public Acts”
Chris Bobel, Tim Sieber, Karen L. Suyemoto, Shirley Tang, and Ann Torke
Processes of Emergence and Connection: Interrelations of Past, Present, and Future in Journeying for Conocimiento
Karen L. Suyemoto
Concluding Reflections—A Dialogue: This Bridge We Are Building: “Inner Work, Public Acts”
Chris Bobel, Tim Sieber, Karen L. Suyemoto, Shirley Tang, and Ann Torke