“…It has also facilitated my engagement in Anzaldúan-inspired practices of autohistoria-teoría -that fusion of "cultural and personal biographies with memoir, history, storytelling, myth, and other forms of theorizing" (Keating, 2009, p. 9)which would have otherwise been made invalid under more traditional forms of academic knowledge expression and dissemination. As it will be evident throughout this text, and as others have demonstrated via their own explorations of their academic lives as Othered (Ashlee et al, 2017;Boylorn, 2013;Diversi & Moreira, 2016;Elbelazi & Alharbi, 2019;Johnson, 2013;Toyosaki, 2018;Ward Randolph & Weems, 2010), autoethnographic methods allow marginalized individuals in academic spaces to operationalize and make sense of its constitutive, violent practices and give our readers the chance to act and transform their own worlds (Denzin, 2013). For some of us, autoethnographic texts are one of the few methods of epistemological connection and intellectual transformation that allows us to "embrace vulnerability with purpose, make contributions to existing scholarship, and comment on/critique culture and cultural practices."…”