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Journal articles on the topic 'Epistemological Borders'

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1

Sadozaï, Mélanie. "Central Asia’s Coverage in the Border Studies Literature: A Systematic Review of Fundamental Contributions to the Field." Central Asian Affairs 11, no. 3-4 (2025): 296–332. https://doi.org/10.30965/22142290-bja10058.

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Abstract This article assesses how the five Central Asian republics are covered in the field of English-language border studies. It features the social science literature which places one or multiple borders at the core of their study. I argue that the work on borders by scholars of Central Asia is not only well located in border studies debates but that it also contributes to renewing it. By reviewing 76 references of research works dealing with Central Asian borders, I contend that those are not peripheral examples of larger epistemological conversations of the field but an integral and legi
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2

Novak, Paolo. "Back to Borders." Critical Sociology 43, no. 6 (2016): 847–64. http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/0896920516644034.

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What is a border? Who is a migrant? The paper uses these questions to distinguish between constructivist, Marxist and postcolonial answers provided by critical border scholarship, with three aims. First, identifying common concerns and interrogating divergent trajectories, the paper offers a practical invitation to dialogue between these various positions. Second, it evidences how critical border scholarship follows a social-to-spatial analytical trajectory to answer these questions: borders and migration function as a spatial confirmation of a pre-defined ontology of the social. As this is de
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Español, Alicia, Giuseppina Marsico, and Luca Tateo. "Maintaining borders: From border guards to diplomats." Human Affairs 28, no. 4 (2018): 443–60. http://dx.doi.org/10.1515/humaff-2018-0036.

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Abstract The article aims at integrating the cultural psychology perspective of into the multidisciplinary field of border studies. It analyses the border phenomenon as a co-genetic system. The authors investigate the psychological side of people who relate to the border out of different motives. Then, it expands some of the theoretical concepts current in border studies by introducing psychological dimensions such as intentionality and directionality. Finally, the framework is applied to two case-studies representing the northern and southern European Union frontiers: the case of Estonian off
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Espanol, Alicia, Giuseppina Marsico, and Luca Tateo. "Maintaining borders: From border guards to diplomats." Human Affairs 29, no. 1 (2019): 108–26. http://dx.doi.org/10.1515/humaff-2019-0010.

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Abstract The article aims at integrating the cultural psychology perspective of into the multidisciplinary field of border studies. It analyses the border phenomenon as a co-genetic system. The authors investigate the psychological side of people who relate to the border out of different motives. Then, it expands some of the theoretical concepts current in border studies by introducing psychological dimensions such as intentionality and directionality. Finally, the framework is applied to two case-studies representing the northern and southern European Union frontiers: the case of Estonian off
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5

Brambilla, Chiara, and Reece Jones. "Rethinking borders, violence, and conflict: From sovereign power to borderscapes as sites of struggles." Environment and Planning D: Society and Space 38, no. 2 (2019): 287–305. http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/0263775819856352.

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This article advances the understanding of borders with respect to their epistemological, ontological, and empirical intersections with violence and conflict, which remain understudied within critical border studies. Specifically, the article explores the potential of recent interdisciplinary research on the border–migration nexus to find critical resources that might foster a better understanding of the complex relationships between borders, violence, and conflict. From this viewpoint, the border is not only a site of the founding violence of the sovereign power, but borders – reconceived as
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6

Milenkovic, Pavle. "The region's borders: Heterotopia and identity - Epistemological aspect." Socioloski pregled 36, no. 1-2 (2002): 201–17. http://dx.doi.org/10.5937/socpreg0201201m.

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7

Vuola, Elina. "Non-systematic Theology? Epistemological Travels Between Borders and Disciplines." Tidsskrift for Teologi og Kirke 75, no. 02-03 (2004): 147–62. http://dx.doi.org/10.18261/issn1504-2952-2004-02-03-06.

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8

Pötzsch, Holger. "Borders, Barriers and Grievable Lives." Nordicom Review 32, no. 2 (2011): 75–94. http://dx.doi.org/10.1515/nor-2017-0114.

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Abstract Based on a close reading of Ridley Scott’s war film Black Hawk Down (USA 2001; BHD), the present article investigates the formal properties through which a certain strain of war and action movies discursively constitutes the other – the enemy – as less than human. I develop the argument that the emergent relation between friend and foe in these films can be read through the concept of the border as an epistemological barrier that keeps the other incomprehensible, inaccessible, and ultimately ungrievable. Having demonstrated how BHD sets up such epistemological barriers, I widen my foc
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9

Janack, Marianne. "Changing the epistemological and psychological subject: William James's psychology without borders." Metaphilosophy 35, no. 1-2 (2004): 160–77. http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/j.1467-9973.2004.00311.x.

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10

Rossman, Sasha. "Materializing Borders and Learning to Think in Limits in 17th-century France." Artium Quaestiones, no. 35 (December 31, 2024): 103–25. https://doi.org/10.14746/aq.2024.35.5.

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A pietra dura table manufactured at the royal Gobelins workshops (Paris) in 1684 will serve as a case study for considering the historical dimensions of borders and how they take particular aesthetic forms. The table pictures a map of France, made out of a mosaic of differently colored pieces of marble. The map is traversed by representations of boundaries, between provinces and states as well as a five-part bounded frame that encircles the map. In this object, borders appear as both a lens through which one can learn about the world and control it, while simultaneously presenting boundaries a
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11

Motta, Sara, and Suman Lahiry. "Queering diasporic decolonial feminisms on, against and beyond borders." Relaciones Internacionales, no. 58 (February 28, 2025): 179–91. https://doi.org/10.15366/relacionesinternacionales2025.58.009.

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In this queering decolonial feminist co(w)riting we bring to text a plural voice making of the philosophies and dark wisdoms emergent when queer decolonial feminist diasporic migrant/refugee (non)subjects speak in their/our own terms. We speak from the pluralities of the exteriority of (non)being and t)race of the “hieroglyphics of the flesh” (Spillers, 1987) as the attempted destruction of the racialized (M)other through blanqueamiento as onto-epistemological project of anti-life in nation-state/governance formation and (re)production. We bring to text the markings of the violating onto-epist
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12

Gonzalez, Eduardo T. "Epistemological Borders and Crossings in the War against ISIS in the Philippines." Philippine Political Science Journal 40, no. 1-2 (2019): 124–52. http://dx.doi.org/10.1163/2165025x-12340005.

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Abstract Following the approach of Judith Butler in Frames of war: When is life grievable? and similar theoretical perspectives, the paper examines how the war against ISIS in Southern Philippines discursively represents the “other” – the victims of war – as dispensable “collateral damage”. There is no disputing that the siege of Marawi City by an ISIS- inspired group has taken a terrible toll on human life and has exposed the increasing vulnerability of the country to terrorism. Yet, the relation between the state and the displaced victims that emerged, brought forth in and through media repo
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13

Gara, Jaroslaw. "The metaphor of border and the heuristics of borderline experiences and their significance for pedagogical thought and activity." Studia z Teorii Wychowania XIII, no. 2 (39) (2022): 27–53. http://dx.doi.org/10.5604/01.3001.0015.9258.

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The main thesis of this text is expressed in the statement that man is a “borderline being” – who lives within specific boundaries, and his adaptation and development are based on the dialectics of the borderline experience of various specific worlds and their regularities. A metaphor as such always possesses a certain “epistemological surplus” in the layer of its meanings, which may reveal the nature and specificity of that which is complex or ambiguous in its forms of existence. Therefore, the metaphor of border should be considered one of the most important clues in an attempt to bring huma
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Cengiz Uçan, Timur. "Borders, Boundaries, Frontiers, Limits." Filosofia e questioni pubbliche, no. 1-2025 (June 1, 2025): 177–93. https://doi.org/10.17473/2240-7987-2025-1-14.

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This article delves into the intricacies of the uses of the words and concepts of borders, boundaries, frontiers, and limits, to address epistemological difficulties related to linguistic and philosophical confusions, sometimes used to target migrants populations. These confusions accordingly can and should be ended to coherently pose and sufficiently address social and ecological difficulties whose interrelatedness is increasingly acknowledged. This objective can be attained by criticizing the confusion of borders as frontiers and borders as outlines, which tends to lead to conceiving of (unr
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Gelézeau, Valérie. "Beyond the 'Long Partition'. From Divisive Geographies of Korea to the Korean 'Meta-Culture'." European Journal of East Asian Studies 9, no. 1 (2010): 1–24. http://dx.doi.org/10.1163/156805810x517643.

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AbstractThis paper addresses the importance of the post-colonial division of Korea between North and South in shaping not only territorial structures, but also geographical interpretations of contemporary Korea. After a critical analysis of the Korean 'meta-border', the paper discusses how traditional approaches in Korean geography consider the 'long partition' as a backdrop affecting South and North Korean societies. Until the 1990s, this divisive paradigm was expressed in South Korea by the focus on various embodiments of the developmental state at the national scale with great attention on
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16

Bak, John S. "A Reporter Without Borders: Tennessee Williams’s Literary ‘War’ Journalism, 1928." Cadernos de Literatura Comparada, no. 44 (2021): 51–71. http://dx.doi.org/10.21747/2183-2242/cad44a3.

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Drawing on the discipline of border studies, the article examines the epistemological dilemmas with travelogues per literary journalism studies, given that they involve the simultaneous crossing of both physical (geopolitical frontiers) and conceptual (textual/genetic) borders. The article uses as its case study a travelogue written by American playwright Tennessee Williams during his Grand Tour through Europe in 1928 when he was just seventeen. A rare example of the playwright’s flirtation with the genre of literary journalism at a time when objective journalism was establishing itself as the
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17

Boingeanu, Corneliu. "Personhood in its protological and eschatological patterns: an Eastern Orthodox view of the ontology of personality." Evangelical Quarterly 78, no. 1 (2006): 3–19. http://dx.doi.org/10.1163/27725472-07801001.

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Eastern Orthodox anthropology is structured exclusively between the borders of two major points of reference: (1) a protological point of departure which sets the scene for an epistemological understanding of human personality as a reflection of God’s own existence; (2) an eschatological point of arrival which demonstrates the goal of human personhood according to God’s own plan. Between these two boundaries human personality finds both its epistemological shape and its ontological structure. Eastern anthropologists regard other elements introduced in the epistemological structure of personhoo
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18

Simoncini, Guendalina. "Beyond the “Epopee of Ben Guerdane”: Exploring the Plurality of Resistance at the South-Eastern Tunisian Border." Studi Magrebini 19, no. 1 (2021): 88–109. http://dx.doi.org/10.1163/2590034x-12340041.

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Abstract This article aims to shed light on the plural form of resistance performed around the South-Eastern Tunisian border area through the case study of the ordinary people of Ben Guerdane’s resistance to the jihadi attack of 7th March 2016. Placing the so-called “epopee of Ben Guerdane” in a broader historical context, it seeks to explore the fluctuations between resistance and repression along the border area both in the past and in the present, showing how multifaceted the repertoire of resistance – which includes anti-colonial struggle, guerrilla action, regime opposition, subversions,
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19

Macuglia, Daniele. "Blending Borders and Sparking Change." Historical Studies in the Natural Sciences 54, no. 5 (2024): 569–608. http://dx.doi.org/10.1525/hsns.2024.54.5.569.

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Between the mid-1970s and mid-1980s, molecular simulations emerged as a transformative force within materials science. Sidney Yip’s early contributions at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology, alongside his involvement in the 1985 International School of Physics “Enrico Fermi” in Varenna, Italy, catalyzed the convergence of traditional methods with computational techniques and helped drive a redefinition of the discipline’s epistemic and methodological boundaries. This article argues that Yip’s biography and professional trajectory as a Chinese-born engineer and scientist in the United St
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20

Drouillard, Jill. "Queering Gestell." Journal of Speculative Philosophy 36, no. 2 (2022): 194–205. http://dx.doi.org/10.5325/jspecphil.36.2.0194.

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ABSTRACT This article takes Judith Butler’s epistemological problem of “framing” alongside Dana S. Belu’s notion of “reproductive enframing” to analyze whose bodies lie outside the borders of who is considered the appropriate reproductive citizen. Are all bodies subject to reproductive enframing under a totalizing technological ideology that Martin Heidegger refers to as Gestell? Or, does Belu’s notion of “partial enframing” allow a space to queer, or upset, our current understanding of such ideology? By queering the way that we currently view assisted reproductive technology (ART), can we wid
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21

Martine, Renouprez. "Transiter du « féminin » au « masculin » avec Paul B. Preciado." Caietele Echinox 42 (June 30, 2022): 36–49. http://dx.doi.org/10.24193/cechinox.2022.42.03.

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In Paul Preciado’s epistemological revolution, there is neither masculine nor feminine that holds, neither trans nor cis, neither homosexual nor heterosexual, but a system of production of truth to be modified, outside of binary thought. His chronicles grouped together in Un appartement sur Uranus (2019) are as many crossings of borders, of gender as of states. They draw a new cartography that includes the third party, the margins, the migrants, the left out.
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22

Durrer, Victoria, Aoife Mcgrath, and Peter Campbell. "Artists’ Mobility Across Borders: A Mixed Methods Approach to Understanding Dance on the Island of Ireland." Journal of Cultural Management and Cultural Policy / Zeitschrift für Kulturmanagement und Kulturpolitik 8, no. 2 (2022): 115–36. http://dx.doi.org/10.14361/zkmm-2022-0205.

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Abstract This paper argues for the importance of mixed research methods in capturing the voices and perspectives of artists to understand the territorial nature of cultural policy. A pilot study, Co-Motion: Dance and borders, used an experimental, interdisciplinary approach of epistemological pluralism mixing improvised dance methods with survey data to understand the cross border professional experiences of dance artists on the island of Ireland. We see territorial mobility as both a policy practice and a construct, and sought to explore the impact and reception of that mobility on artists. B
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Durrer, Victoria, Aoife Mcgrath, and Peter Campbell. "Artists’ Mobility Across Borders: A Mixed Methods Approach to Understanding Dance on the Island of Ireland." Journal of Cultural Management and Cultural Policy / Zeitschrift für Kulturmanagement und Kulturpolitik 8, no. 2 (2022): 115–36. http://dx.doi.org/10.14361/zkmm-2022-080206.

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Abstract This paper argues for the importance of mixed research methods in capturing the voices and perspectives of artists to understand the territorial nature of cultural policy. A pilot study, Co-Motion: Dance and borders, used an experimental, interdisciplinary approach of epistemological pluralism mixing improvised dance methods with survey data to understand the cross border professional experiences of dance artists on the island of Ireland. We see territorial mobility as both a policy practice and a construct, and sought to explore the impact and reception of that mobility on artists. B
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24

Seif, Farouk Y. "De-Sign as a Destiny of Negation." American Journal of Semiotics 36, no. 3 (2020): 179–215. http://dx.doi.org/10.5840/ajs202112066.

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Boundaries and borders are undefined and ambiguous paradoxical phenomena, but there is a prevalent repudiation of their ephemerality and transitoriness. Crossing unaccustomed boundaries and traversing untried borders can be achieved by understanding the boundless scope of design and semiotics. Since the idea of design and the doctrine of signs are not restricted by either the humanities or sciences, De-sign (fusion of design and signs) is a boundaryless and transdisciplinary perspective that cannot tolerate cultural enclaves, social dogmas, and an insistence on absolute reality. Engaging in th
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Schwartz, Elaine. "Essay Review: Crossing Borders/Shifting Paradigms: Multiculturalism and Children's Literature." Harvard Educational Review 65, no. 4 (1995): 634–51. http://dx.doi.org/10.17763/haer.65.4.6231502vv4n36756.

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If we lived in a democratic state our language would have to hurtle, fly, course and sing, in all the undeniable and representative and participating voices of everybody here. We would make our language conform to the truth of our many selves and we would make our language lead us into the quality of power that a democratic state must represent. (Jordan, 1987, p. 24) June Jordan's words bring forth a utopian vision of a future in which issues of language, voice, truth, power, and democracy all come together in the creation of a culturally diverse democratic world. She speaks in the language of
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Martin, Lucile. "Beyond the “War on Terror”: Mobilities and Regimes of Inequality; An Epistemological and Ethical Reflection." International Journal of Middle East Studies 54, no. 2 (2022): 382–86. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/s0020743822000393.

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At the intersection of multipolar, multi-scalar sites of mutual exchange and tension, Afghanistan and Iraq conjure imaginaries of shadowy and risky geographies wired up to dispersed terrorist cells around the globe. These spaces constitute the sites where the “civilizing process” of the “War on Terror” takes place, “laboratories of globalization” where global hegemonic neoliberal projects of free market democratization and development get stranded. At the same time, they are spaces where global interconnections are accelerated, and where multiple mobilities, often contingent upon expectations
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27

Fox, Coleen, and Christopher Sneddon. "Political Borders, Epistemological Boundaries, and Contested Knowledges: Constructing Dams and Narratives in the Mekong River Basin." Water 11, no. 3 (2019): 413. http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/w11030413.

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The Mekong River Basin of mainland Southeast Asia is confronting a series of intertwined social, political, and biophysical crises. The ongoing construction of major hydroelectric dams on the river’s main channel and tributary systems—particularly in the basin’s lower and more populated reaches—is leading to significant socioecological changes. Multiple scientific studies have suggested that proceeding with the planned dam construction will disrupt the region’s incredibly productive fisheries and threaten the livelihoods of millions of basin residents. These effects will almost certainly be ex
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28

Aquallo, Alan Lechusza. "The I/Indian Not-In-The-Textbook: Native/Indigenous Post-Structuralism, Critical Methodologies, Epistemologies, and Tribal Realities as Agency toward the Decolonization of the Territorial Divide In American Indian Studies Courses." Indian Journal of Management and Language 1, no. 1 (2021): 10–16. http://dx.doi.org/10.35940/ijml.b2006.041121.

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This article focuses upon how, within American Indian Studies courses, there is a necessary border crossing between territorialized Native and non-Native students. Taking the literal borders of Indian reservations, and repositioning these realities as a metaphor for critical epistemological deconstruction, I argue that there is a necessary educational border crossing which is necessary for Native/Indigenous equity and socio-political justice to be realized and acquired as cultural currency. As students within these courses begin to understand, embrace, and challenge American Indian Studies (AI
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Aquallo, Alan Lechusza. "The I/Indian Not-In-The-Textbook: Native/Indigenous Post-Structuralism, Critical Methodologies, Epistemologies, and Tribal Realities as Agency toward the Decolonization of the Territorial Divide In American Indian Studies Courses." Indian Journal of Management and Language 1, no. 1 (2021): 10–16. http://dx.doi.org/10.54105/ijml.b2006.041121.

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This article focuses upon how, within American Indian Studies courses, there is a necessary border crossing between territorialized Native and non-Native students. Taking the literal borders of Indian reservations, and repositioning these realities as a metaphor for critical epistemological deconstruction, I argue that there is a necessary educational border crossing which is necessary for Native/Indigenous equity and socio-political justice to be realized and acquired as cultural currency. As students within these courses begin to understand, embrace, and challenge American Indian Studies (AI
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30

Alan, Lechusza Aquallo. "The I/Indian Not-In-The-Textbook: Native/Indigenous Post-Structuralism, Critical Methodologies, Epistemologies, and Tribal Realities as Agency toward the Decolonization of the Territorial Divide In American Indian Studies Courses." Indian Journal of Management and Language (IJML) 1, no. 1 (2021): 10–16. https://doi.org/10.54105/ijml.B2006.041121.

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Abstract: This article focuses upon how, within American Indian Studies courses, there is a necessary border crossing between territorialized Native and non-Native students. Taking the literal borders of Indian reservations, and repositioning these realities as a metaphor for critical epistemological deconstruction, I argue that there is a necessary educational border crossing which is necessary for Native/Indigenous equity and socio-political justice to be realized and acquired as cultural currency. As students within these courses begin to understand, embrace, and challenge American Indian S
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31

Kuropjatnik, M. S. "Indigeneity in the context of globalization: epistemological and sociocultural aspects." RUDN Journal of Sociology 19, no. 3 (2019): 387–96. http://dx.doi.org/10.22363/2313-2272-2019-19-3-387-396.

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In recent decades, the “indigenization of modernity” has become one of the significant trends of the reconfiguration of landscapes of social and cultural diversity. In its contemporary meaning, the concept of indigeneity expresses the desire of indigenous peoples and various social and cultural communities, formerly marginalized within the borders of national states, to independently determine their development. From the global perspective, indigeneity is no longer associated with certain types of societies or cultural scripts of authenticity and traditional lifestyles. Indigenous actors cease
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32

Siddikov, Ilyasjon Bakhromovich Mamatov Mamajon. "THE INFLUENCE OF THE IDEAS OF GREEK AND INDIAN PHILOSOPHY ON THE DIALECTIC OF GNISEOLOGICAL VIEWS OF THE MEDIEVAL MUSLIM EAST." INTERNATIONAL BULLETIN OF APPLIED SCIENCE AND TECHNOLOGY 3, no. 5 (2023): 438–43. https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.7927844.

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the article analyzes the main factors that influenced the development of epistemological views in the Middle East, translation of works in foreign countries, ideas of creative approach. By the middle of the 8th century, as the borders of the Arab caliphate expanded to China in the east, the Atlantic Ocean in the west, and the Mowarounnahr in the south, the Arabs had the opportunity to get to know the knowledge and cultural monuments of other nations, which were considered to be the place of ancient civilizations, and collected the books there in Baghdad and Damascus, which are the main cities
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Zhou, Qingyang Freya. "Queering the Screen: Spectral Figures and German-Taiwanese Encounters in Monika Treut’s Ghosted." Seminar: A Journal of Germanic Studies 58, no. 3 (2022): 251–70. http://dx.doi.org/10.3138/seminar.58.3.2.

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In queer German director Monika Treut’s film Ghosted (2009), a plethora of screen apparatuses, including cameras, laptops, and cellphones, mediate encounters among the German protagonist, Sophie Schmitt; her Taiwanese girlfriend, Ai-ling; and Ai-ling’s spectral doppelgänger, Mei-li. Examining how the screen bestows visibility on the otherwise elusive figure of the queer Asian woman while limiting her freedom, this article explores how the comparatively more fluid apparitional lesbian challenges the domesticating effect of racially charged looks by destabilizing various borders between life and
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Ammaturo, Francesca Romana. "Europe and whiteness: Challenges to European identity and European citizenship in light of Brexit and the ‘refugees/migrants crisis’." European Journal of Social Theory 22, no. 4 (2018): 548–66. http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/1368431018783318.

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This article uses the current ‘refugees/migrants crisis’ and Brexit as illustrative of the numerous challenges the European Union faces today when it comes to its identity and the construction of a ‘European citizenship’. By discussing the proliferation of borders on the European continent and by analysing the sociological significance of such proliferation, the article argues that Europe is experiencing an ontological and epistemological rather than an existential crisis that relates to its incapacity to acknowledge, and critically engage with, its fundamental neo-colonial and neo-liberal mat
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35

Santos, Maria Teresa, and Maria da Saudade Baltazar. "Violencia contra as mulheres: olhares sem fronteira = Violence against women: views without borders." Cuestiones de género: de la igualdad y la diferencia, no. 14 (June 27, 2019): 1. http://dx.doi.org/10.18002/cg.v0i14.5936.

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<p><strong>Resumo</strong></p><p>O fenómeno da violência contra as mulheres - persistente, transversal e desterritorializado - é o objeto de análise deste monográfico intitulado “Violência contra as mulheres: olhares sem fronteiras”, que se aborda num quadro diacrónico e sincrónico, bem como por diversas perspetivas epistemológicas e empíricas. Os trabalhos reunidos buscam contribuir para o reforço de boas práticas sociais e políticas de índole humanista, e dar a conhecer narrativas sobre experiências reais e o limite da vulnerabilidade das vítimas de violência de
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36

Locklear, Kathleen. "Bridging as Metaphor- A Systems Thinking Approach for Exploring Transboundary Risk." Archives of Business Research 10, no. 12 (2022): 1–7. http://dx.doi.org/10.14738/abr.1012.13553.

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This paper provides a novel approach for understanding transboundary risk, including ‘grand challenges’ such as climate change. Discussion begins with an exploration of the origins of transboundary risk as a byproduct of globalization. Thereafter, the concept of ‘bridging’ is used in order to conceptualize the spread of transboundary risk across traditional physical boundaries, including geographic borders. Building upon prior theory, systems thinking and complexity are used as conceptual lenses for understanding the dynamics of transboundary risk. Scenario planning is offered as a means for e
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Poon, Angelia. "COMIC ACTS OF (BE)LONGING: PERFORMING ENGLISHNESS INWONDERFUL ADVENTURES OF MRS. SEACOLE IN MANY LANDS." Victorian Literature and Culture 35, no. 2 (2007): 501–16. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/s1060150307051601.

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THE POWER THAT COMES FROMbeing English in the Victorian period is crucially dependent on a categorizing imperative that establishes and structures a series of distinctions such as those between citizen and foreigner, colonizer and colonized, and metropole and colony. These distinctions have epistemological borders that require policing, as do all cross-border interactions that threaten to muddy the imperial landscape with unsanctioned forms of knowledge and affiliation. It is against such a framework of constraints for understanding the regulation of Englishness that the story of the Jamaican-
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Proto, Matteo. "Applying Friedrich Ratzel's political and biogeography to the debate on natural borders in the Italian context (1880–1920)." Geographica Helvetica 78, no. 1 (2023): 41–52. http://dx.doi.org/10.5194/gh-78-41-2023.

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Abstract. This paper examines the contribution of Italian academic geography to the processes of nation-building between ca. 1880–1920. With reference to Friedrich Ratzel's works, it explores the ways in which biological and vitalist theories shaped political processes. In the decades between Italy's national unification until the first post-war period, Italian academic geographers helped to consolidate the nation-state by means of theoretical reflection, applied research, and education. The main focus of geographers was in defining the national space and its boundaries, especially by developi
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Ponsaran, Marciana Agnes. "No Walls, No Ceilings, No Floors: Nanotechnology and Some Implications for Education." Philippiniana Sacra 54, no. 161 (2019): 35–50. http://dx.doi.org/10.55997/ps1003liv161a3.

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Nanotechnology is an enabling technology that is poised to create a huge impact in the various spheres of human concerns such as the geopolitical, business, education, legal, military, environment, health, and medical domains. With its rapid and inevitable development, it becomes imperative not only to deliberate on its ethical and social implications but likewise examine the ontological and epistemological issues and difficulties underlying this fledgling field. This paper will explore the novelty, distinctiveness, interdisciplinarity, and incommensurability issues in nanotechnology. More spe
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de Castro, Ilda Teresa. "Mulher e Natureza: Sob o Jugo da Usurpação." Philosophica: International Journal for the History of Philosophy 25, no. 49 (2017): 147–61. http://dx.doi.org/10.5840/philosophica2017254912.

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Thinking Nature Today, at the advent of the Anthropocene, combines different scenarios, sometimes antagonistic, in the derivations of a territory whose borders are still defining. Between the “green economy” and the contamination of animal-environmental studies and ethics, we take the man-woman and human-nonhuman oppositions as a focus. We address the ecophilosophical tendencies that recognize the parallelism between the domain of feminine nature and the domain of Nature, and register the masculine-feminine dualism, the repercussions of androcentrism and the split imposed by the mechanistic th
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Avallone, Gennaro, and Yoan Molinero Gerbeau. "Liberar las migraciones: la contribución de Abdelmalek Sayad a una epistemología migrante-céntrica." Migraciones internacionales 12 (April 30, 2021): 0. http://dx.doi.org/10.33679/rmi.v1i1.1949.

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The migrant category is linked to the origin of the State as the predominant political unit in the world. This is because, as Abdelmalek Sayad (2008, 2010a) pointed out, without a State, there would be no migrants, as they exist as a political category, referring to the nationals of a State who cross the borders to settle (temporarily or permanently). This functional and historical connection has had a decisive impact at the epistemological level on the discipline of migration studies, where hegemonic paradigms have used analysis categories that not only reproduced the tate framework, but have
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Avallone, Gennaro, and Yoan Molinero Gerbeau. "Liberar las migraciones: la contribución de Abdelmalek Sayad a una epistemología migrante-céntrica." Migraciones internacionales 12 (April 30, 2021): 0. http://dx.doi.org/10.33679/rmi.v1i1.1949.

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The migrant category is linked to the origin of the State as the predominant political unit in the world. This is because, as Abdelmalek Sayad (2008, 2010a) pointed out, without a State, there would be no migrants, as they exist as a political category, referring to the nationals of a State who cross the borders to settle (temporarily or permanently). This functional and historical connection has had a decisive impact at the epistemological level on the discipline of migration studies, where hegemonic paradigms have used analysis categories that not only reproduced the tate framework, but have
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43

Podoroga, Boris. "Three Conditions of Contemporary Social Philosophy Criticism." Russian Journal of Philosophical Sciences, no. 6 (October 10, 2018): 135–39. http://dx.doi.org/10.30727/0235-1188-2018-6-135-139.

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In this article we reveal the common conditions of modern social philosphy (poststructuralism, neo-Marxism, analytical philosophy of history), which theoretical discourse is subordinated to critical discourse, as distinguished from the canonical I. Kant’s, G. Hegel’s, M. Heidegger’s, M. Sheller’s J.-P. Sartre’s philosophical theories, which are bonded with the development of positivist epistemological, historical, ontological or anthropological presuppositions. We will talk about tree main conditions: 1) decline of theological definition of subject, 2) mechanism of repetition, 3) interdiscipli
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Іванівна Дутчак, Олена. "Окремі методологічні аспекти дослідження історіографії музейництва на Прикарпатті другої половини ХІХ – 30-х рр. ХХ століття". Zeszyt Naukowy Prac Ukrainoznawczych 10 (19 липня 2023): 5–16. http://dx.doi.org/10.5604/01.3001.0054.0944.

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This article presents certain methodological aspects of the historiography of museums in the Precarpathian region in the period from mid-19th century to the 1930s. All terminological problems are identified. The meaning of the terms “museum work”, “museum studies”, “museology” is outlined. The chronological boundaries of the study are determined. They have two levels. The first level is the territory of the Precarpathian region, which almost completely coincides with the administrative borders of the Ivano-Frankivsk region today. The second level has a global scale – scientific works of scient
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Bollettin, Paride. "Wilderness and domestication in human-other-than human primate collectives." Áltera Revista de Antropologia 3, no. 11 (2021): 201–26. http://dx.doi.org/10.22478/ufpb.2447-9837.2020v3n11.51490.

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This paper aims at discussing the frontier between wilderness and domestication in the production and experience of human and non-human primate collectives. It describes three diverse ethnographic cases: populations of humans and other primates in a wildlife and exotic rescue centre in Italy, in a protected park in The Gambia, and in unprotected forests in Brazil. Such a panorama of frontiers between wild and domesticated human-non-human primate collectives allows to observe how these are constantly redefinedas flexible interactions in specific lived experiences. Active agency of non-human pri
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Selvamni, S., and S. Anbarasi. "Recount Restriction and Identity in Margaret Atwood’s Surfacing." Shanlax International Journal of Arts, Science and Humanities 11, S5 (2024): 118–20. http://dx.doi.org/10.34293/sijash.v11is5.7671.

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Margaret Atwood’s Surfacing crams the effects of the demarcation of identity revels in Canadian history where the question of Canadian national identity was sprouting, becoming a pointer that was more clearly defined and more intentionally sought out by Canadian artists and citizens. Atwood’s Surfacing can be considered in light of these historical developments, in sketching the establishment of recount restriction and not an avowal of the positive effects with such identifiers can bring. As a Canadian writer and a woman in particular, the narrator’s communal groupings stipulate her victimhood
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Moslemi, Amir Abbas. "An Exordium to a Promise." International Letters of Social and Humanistic Sciences 54 (June 2015): 45–52. http://dx.doi.org/10.18052/www.scipress.com/ilshs.54.45.

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James Joyce’s fine shades of philosophy have been neglected in recent times, especially when it comes to fill either epistemological or ontological lacuna in taxonomy as to whereabouts of his canon. Epistemology and ontology are a couple of the core areas of philosophy. Since mirroring cognitive and post-cognitive questions in postmodern literature may invite a rereading of potential authors, a historiography of “theory of knowledge” and ontological nuances is reviewed in this paper not to represent literary examples, but to mind a hiatus in descriptive poetics. The idea is that Ulysses and Fi
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Mohd Nizah, Mohd Azmir. "Political Tribes: Group Instinct and the Fate of Nations. Amy Chua, Penguin US. 2019. 293 pages." Sains Insani 10, no. 1 (2025): 198–200. https://doi.org/10.33102/sainsinsani.vol10no1.808.

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In Political Tribes: Group Instinct and the Fate of Nations (2019), Professor Amy Chua offers a sobering diagnosis of modern politics: that identity, not ideology or economics, is the fundamental driver of human behavior and political destiny. The book is both a critique of American liberal universalism and an exposition of how group loyalties—whether ethnic, religious, cultural, or class-based—continue to shape political outcomes around the world. For Chua, the repeated failure of U.S. foreign interventions and the deepening polarization within its own borders can be traced to a persistent bl
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Adami, Guilherme. "Researching Teaching/Learning of Languages - Any Room for Art in There? The Case of Brazilian Applied Linguistics Today and Its Sources of Knowledge: Borders, Boundaries, Barriers, Barricades." Revista Brasileira de Linguística Aplicada 20, no. 1 (2020): 39–59. http://dx.doi.org/10.1590/1984-6398201914500.

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ABSTRACT Based on a panoramic view of current debates regarding the ways of doing Applied Linguistics in Brazil, this article discusses the pertinence of the use of non-logocentric and/or non-scientific theories as reference for the description and formulation of research problems, as well as for the construction of research procedures in the field of (foreign) language teaching/learning. Relying on analyses of the epistemological bases of literacy theories consolidated in the pedagogical framework of the High School Curriculum Guidelines (BRASIL, 2006), seen here as a critical matrix for unde
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Perić, Vladimir B. "REPUDIATING NOSTALGIA: THE DISILLUSIONED HOMELAND IN MIRKO DEMIĆ’S PENTALOGY." PHILOLOGICAL STUDIES 18, no. 1 (2020): 230–48. http://dx.doi.org/10.17072/1857-6060-2020-18-1-230-248.

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Mirko Demić’s war pentalogy provides a complex and nuanced view of nostalgia as part of the epistemological world. The exile’s sorrow for a lost country is shown through the instability of the émigré’s post-war identity, the traumas caused by the 1990s wars on the territory of former Yugoslavia and the essential impossibility of a return. An unstable self contains emotional cracks that arise from the lack of homeland, the (self)naming of the refugee and his (self-)marginalization, reaching a climax in the narrator’s silence. The devastating effect of war is evident in the meticulously depicted
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