Jorge Erdely Graham is a Mexican theologian, religious studies scholar, [1] and author. [2] [3] [4] [5]
He is associate editor [6] of Revista Académica para el Estudio de las Religiones, a member of the American Academy of Religion and former director of Centro de Investigaciones del Instituto Cristiano de Mexico. [7]
He obtained a bachelor's degree in biological sciences from University of Mary Hardin–Baylor and a doctorate in philosophy from Newport University. [8] [9] Later, Erdely Graham completed a fellowship in Theology at the Graduate Theological Foundation. [2] [10] [11]
Moros y Cristianos or Moros i Cristians literally in English Moors and Christians, is a set of festival activities which are celebrated in many towns and cities of Spain, mainly in the southern Valencian Community. According to popular tradition the festivals commemorate the battles, combats and fights between Moors and Christians during the period known as Reconquista. There are also festivals of Moros y Cristianos in Spanish America.
Lauro Zavala is a scholarly researcher, known for his work on literary theory, semiotics and film, especially in relation to irony, metafiction and micro-narratives. Faculty professor since 1984 at Universidad Autónoma Metropolitana, Xochimilco, in Mexico City, where he is head of the area on Intertextual Semiotics.
Latindex is a bibliographical information system available for free consultation. Established as a network in 1997, the project is based on the cooperation of 17 national resource centers that operate in a coordinated scheme for the gathering and dissemination of relevant information and data on the Iberoamerican journals.
Yolanda Lastra de Suárez is a Mexican linguist specializing in the descriptive linguistics of the indigenous languages of Mexico. She obtained her PhD degree in 1963 from Cornell University, her dissertation written under the guidance of Charles F. Hockett treating the syntax of Cochabamba Quechua in Bolivia. She was married to Argentinian linguist Jorge A. Suárez (1927-1985).
Beatriz Villacañas is a poet, essayist and literary critic.
Horst Matthai Quelle was a Spanish-speaking German philosopher.
María de la Luz Casas Pérez was a Mexican professor and researcher with the Monterrey Institute of Technology and Higher Studies, in the field of communications and politics. Her research work has been recognized by the Mexican government with Level II membership in the Sistema Nacional de Investigadores.
Esther Seligson was a Mexican writer, poet, translator, and historian. She was an academic, with a wide range of interests including art, cultural history, Jewish philosophy, mythology, religion and theater. She published books, poems, short stories and translations. She won the Xavier Villaurrutia Prize and the Magda Donato Award for her literary contributions.
Ernesto Priani is a philosopher, professor, digital humanist, and digital editor.
Daniel Cazés Menache was a Mexican anthropologist and gender studies scholar.
Samuel Silva Gotay is a sociologist of religion of Puerto Rico and Latin America. He was born in Ponce, Puerto Rico in 1935.
Liborio Zerda was a Colombian physician and Muisca scholar. Zerda has been important in the natural sciences of the late 19th and early 20th century in Colombia, publishing many articles about various topics, from medicine to chemical analysis, radioactivity and the popular drink chicha.
Aline Pettersson is a Mexican novelist and poet. Her novels deal with the themes of loneliness, heartbreak, isolation and the passage of time that razes all.
Joseph Hodara is an Israeli sociologist and journalist. Hodara teaches at Bar-Ilan University.
Sonia Cristina Montecino Aguirre is a Chilean writer and anthropologist. In 2013, she was awarded the Premio Nacional de Humanidades y Ciencias Sociales
Manuel Guerra Gómez was a Spanish writer and religious figure.
Ruth Gabriela Cano Ortega is a Mexican historian focused on the history of women in Mexico and sexual diversity during the Porfirian, revolutionary and post-revolutionary periods of Mexico. She specializes in gender analysis. Cano is a professor at the El Colegio de México.
María Teresa Rojas Rabiela is an ethnologist, ethnohistorian, Emeritus National Researcher and Mexican academic, specializing in Chinampas of Mexico's Basin, history of agriculture, hydraulics, technology, and labor organization in Mesoamerica during pre-Columbian and colonial eras, as well as historical photography of Mexico's peasants and indigenous people. She is recognized as a pioneer in historical studies on earthquakes in Mexico. From 2018 to 2021, Rojas Rabiela was involved in the restoration of the section of the pre-Hispanic aqueduct of Tetzcotzinco, Texcoco, known as El caño quebrado.
Pilar Zabala Aguirre is a Spanish researcher, writer, and professor at the Universidad Autónoma de Yucatán. Her research interests include taxation in Castile during the 16th century, the colonial history of Yucatán, and the culture of the Basque exile generated by the Spanish Civil War of 1936.
Es Fellow de Oxford Theological Foundation