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Channels - Do myths ever die? Social-cultural changes and mythical transformations in Indigenous Amazonia: a dialogue with Peter Gow :: FRELIP Discovery
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Do myths ever die? Social-cultural changes and mythical transformations in Indigenous Amazonia: a dialogue with Peter Gow
Enactive Narrativities: Rubber-Times Historicity and Indigenous Media in Peruvian Amazonia
Sociedade sob risco: monetarização, beleza e a economia íntima do dom entre os Rikbaktsa da Amazônia brasileira
Comer como o inimigo: violência, transformações e persistências na economia alimentar wari’ (Amazônia Ocidental)
Applying Mythical Belief to Product Marketing in Thailand
Indigenous feminisms and anthropology
Indigenous Algorithms, Organizations, and Rationality
Peter
Could geoengineering ever start? Could it ever stop? Grist for “Destiny Studies” and “Continuity Ethics”
“Melting Pot” or “Salad Bowl”: Lupine Metaphors and the Myth of American Assimilation in Karen Russell’s “St. Lucy’s Home for Girls Raised by Wolves”
Logical Horses: Or Several Historical, Aesthetic, Allegorical, and Mythical Vignettes
Chamada para dossiê: Indigenous Brazilian Anthropology
"The Myth of Oneness ”: Erasure of Indigenous and Ethnic Identities in Digital Feminist Discourse
Writing from colonial trauma: Land, knowledge, and indigenous refusal
Decolonising Narratives Through Sonic Artistry and Weaving Dialogues: A Trans-Indigenous Exploration
Cultural dynamics: formal descriptions of cultural processes
Globalized mathematics curriculum: could it ever be possible?
Difficult airway: are we ever truly prepared?
Transformationality and Dynamicality of Kinship Structure
Pandora’s Myth and Cultural Trauma in Alex Garland’s Ex Machina
Chamada para dossiê: A Identidade Palestina em tempos do Genocídio em Gaza
India and Latin America: An Epistemic Site for a Cross-Cultural Dialogue
The struggle of indigenous people of the lower Rio Mayo, northwestern Mexico for water resources: an overview and a critical assessment
The two hungers: food security, morality, and cash transfer policies for Canela Apanjekra people in Indigenous Central Brazil
Peter Hitchcock: The Jameson Variable