Remembering José Esteban Muñoz
"I encountered the work of José Esteban Muñoz early in my work, as I was searching for the voices of queer of color cultural critique to influence my own pursuits within decolonized liberation...
View ArticleListening to the World: The Need for Postcolonial Literature in the Secondary...
"If we start teaching information that has very little context for learners in the United States, we as educators focus on difference and can end up “othering” an entire nation, the most significant...
View ArticleMrinalini Sebastian on Gayatri Spivak’s “Can the Subaltern Speak?”
Listen to our resident teacher, Mrinalini Sebastian, discuss Gayatri Spivak's famous, though not always understood, "Can the Subaltern Speak?" Join the conversation today with your questions and comments!
View ArticleA Christian Theology of Homelessness—A Liberationist Take
"God is with those for whom society has made no home; society may push out Mr. Ashton but the Divine has made room for the discredited, dehumanized, denied, and disenfranchised."
View ArticleFaith-based Organizing and the Prison Industrial Complex: An Interview with...
"Our collective healing becomes possible as we take up the struggle together, name our history with honesty, and work to ensure that we break with cycles of trauma and oppression rather than repeat them."
View ArticleExploitation in the South Pacific Island Kingdom Of Tonga
"Clearly, corporate responsibility and human dignity were not the goal, especially not for a young company like Makai that is zealous to make a name for itself with experiential strategies."
View ArticlePostcolonial Empathy is Not a One-Way Red Arrow Strategy
"Empathy is a messy equation that requires deep listening, requires yielding to perspectives different from and that challenge my perspective, and requires making sense of histories in relation to...
View ArticlePamphletarian Theology with Cláudio Carvalhaes | Slam Poetry and Theology
"Like Prophet Gentileza, as a Christian social-eeconomic-cultural-religious actor, I have responsibilities with our ways of living. So my eye, ear, mouth, hands and body will try to be with, or near to...
View ArticleListen and See What Happens: The Power of American Indian Stories
"When we try to tell our story to someone who is different from us, we are faced not only with all of our own baggage, but also the misconceptions and prejudices and even ill will, perceived and real,...
View ArticleReview of Jeanne Choy Tate’s Something Greater: Culture, Family, and...
Tocqueville believed an individualism that leads people to be "shut up in the solitude of his own heart” could be detrimental to communal life and may even threaten democracy itself.
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