2025: An Inverse Year in Review As we say goodbye to another year, here are the few but important pieces by our contributors and community that shaped 2025 at Inverse Journal.
2024: An Inverse Year in Review With 2024 just behind us, we look back at all the pieces published during the past year in ascending chronological order on an animated timeline. Here are all the pieces published by our contributors and from Creative Commons sources that shaped Inverse Journal's 2024. You can click on any piece tha
Cervantes, Lizardi, and the Literary Construction of The Mexican Rogue in Don Catrín de la fachenda — by Patricia Vilches Abstract: This study explores the socio-economic legacies and critique of nation-building found in the work of José Joaquín Fernández de Lizardi (1776-1827). In the nineteenth century, the Latin American elite struggled to disassociate itself from a suffocating colonial machine; they sought their ow
2023: An Inverse Year in Review With 2023 just behind us, we look back at all the pieces published during the past year in ascending chronological order on an animated timeline. Here are all the pieces published by our contributors and from Creative Commons sources that shaped Inverse Journal's 2023. You can click on any piece tha
2022: An Inverse Year in Review With 2022 just behind us, we look back at all the pieces published during the past year in ascending chronological order on an animated timeline. Here are all the pieces published by our contributors and from Creative Commons sources that shaped Inverse Journal's 2022. You can click on any piece tha
Hospital — An Excerpt from Freny Manecksha’s “Flaming Forest, Wounded Valley” (Speaking Tiger, 2022) Freny Manecksha presents an excerpt from the sixth chapter of her latest book, Flaming Forest, Wounded Valley [https://speakingtigerbooks.com/product/flaming-forest-wounded-valley-stories-from-bastar-and-kashmir/], published earlier this year by Speaking Tiger Books [https://speakingtigerbooks.com/]
Sufism in Cinema: The Case of Bab'Aziz: The Prince Who Contemplated His Soul — by Ridade Öztürk This article presents a discussion of key aspects of knowledge in Sufism through an analysis of the film Bab’Aziz: The Prince Who Contemplated His Soul (Nacer Khemir, 2005). The dominant Western perspective argues for the necessity of a rational, objective form of knowledge which is based on logical