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Gloria Anzaldua [7]Saraliza Anzaldúa [2]Adrian Anzaldua [1]
  1.  9
    Can Clinical Empathy Survive? Distress, Burnout, and Malignant Duty in the Age of Covid‐19.Adrian Anzaldua & Jodi Halpern - 2021 - Hastings Center Report 51 (1):22-27.
    The Covid‐19 crisis has accelerated a trend toward burnout in health care workers, making starkly clear that burnout is especially likely when providing health care is not only stressful and sad but emotionally alienating; in such situations, there is no mental space for clinicians to experience authentic clinical empathy. Engaged curiosity toward each patient is a source of meaning and connection for health care providers, and it protects against sympathetic distress and burnout. In a prolonged crisis like Covid‐19, clinicians provide (...)
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  2.  13
    Susto: The Metaphysics of Splitting the Self and Community.Saraliza Anzaldúa - 2023 - Philosophy in the Contemporary World 29 (1):54-72.
    Curanderismo is an Indigenous healing tradition in Chicane communities and throughout Mexico. Using such a lens, this paper analyzes the metaphysical nature of trauma as a splitting (susto) of the self and community. First, this paper explores the Indigenous philosophical principles that form the metaphysics of curanderismo. Second, three reactions to susto will be explored including what Gloria Anzaldua calls the Coyolxauhqui imperative, a re-membering of a split self towards healing. Through the second aim, the third aim of this paper (...)
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  3. Movimientos de rebeldia y las culturas que traicionan.Gloria Anzaldua - 2007 - Multitudes 2 (2):51-60.
    A man and a woman at the same time, borne by the desire for freedom – free, against all psychoanalytic dogmas, to move between two world. She invokes her chicana identity, created in the history of resistance of the Indian woman ; she asserts her mestiza culture – white, Mexican and Indian at the same time, a culture developed according to a feminist plan. Chicanas live in between several world, and tell their story in their own words : a first-person (...)
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  4. I ndex.Elliot Abrams, M. H. Abrams, Patricia Aburdene, John Narsbut, Ahmad Aijaz, Anderson Perry, Phillip Anderson, Gloria Anzaldua, A. Carol & Aqumas St Thomas - 1995 - In Jeffrey Williams (ed.), Pc Wars: Politics and Theory in the Academy. Routledge. pp. 331.
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  5.  24
    Feminist Autobiography in the 1980sThe House on Mango StreetBorderlands/La Frontera: The New MestizaPeople Who Led to My PlaysZami: A New Spelling of My Name: A BiomythographyIn My Mother's HouseBronx Primitive: Portraits in a ChildhoodLandscape for a Good Woman: A Story of Two LivesA Restricted CountryThe Last of the Menu Girls.Regenia Gagnier, Sandra Cisneros, Gloria Anzaldúa, Adrienne Kennedy, Audre Lorde, Kim Chernin, Kate Simon, Carolyn Kay Steedman, Joan Nestle, Denise Chávez, Gloria Anzaldua & Denise Chavez - 1991 - Feminist Studies 17 (1):135.
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