Showing
1 - 5
results of
5
for search '
Mankova, Petia
'
Skip to content
Toggle navigation
0
items
(Full)
All Fields
Title
Author
Subject
Find
Advanced
Search History
Search by Map:
Arctic
Antarctic
Author
Mankova, Petia
Search Results
Showing
1 - 5
results of
5
for search '
Mankova, Petia
'
, query time: 0.03s
Refine Results
Sort
Relevance
Date Descending
Date Ascending
Author
Title
List
Grid
Visual
Select Page | with selected:
Email
Export
Print
Add to Book Bag
Select result number 1
1
Homewarding Remoteness: Representations, agency and everyday life in a tundra village (NW Russia)
by
Mankova
,
Petia
Published 2018
Get access
Doctoral or Postdoctoral Thesis
Select result number 2
2
Heterogeneity and spontaneity: reindeer races, bureaucratic designs and indigenous transformations at the Festival of the North in Murmansk
by
Mankova
,
Petia
Published in
Acta Borealia
(2017)
Get access
Get access
Article in Journal/Newspaper
Select result number 3
3
Making sense of the remote areas: films and stories from a tundra village
by
Mankova
,
Petia
Published in
Sibirica
(2018)
Get access
Get access
Article in Journal/Newspaper
Select result number 4
4
The Komi of the Kola Peninsula within ethnographic descriptions and state policies
by
Mankova
,
Petia
Published in
Nationalities Papers
(2017)
Get access
Get access
Article in Journal/Newspaper
Select result number 5
5
Russlands baser i Arktis
by
Mankova
,
Petia
,
Bones, Stian
Published 2020
Get access
Article in Journal/Newspaper
Select Page | with selected:
Email
Export
Print
Add to Book Bag
Search Tools:
Get RSS Feed
Related Subjects
remoteness
Anthropology
Arctic periphery
Cultural Studies
DOKTOR-001
History
Komi people
Northwestern Russia
Sociology and Political Science
VDP::Humaniora: 000::Historie: 070
VDP::Humanities: 000::History: 070
VDP::Samfunnsvitenskap: 200::Samfunnsgeografi: 290
VDP::Samfunnsvitenskap: 200::Sosialantropologi: 250
VDP::Social science: 200::Human geography: 290
VDP::Social science: 200::Social anthropology: 250
astonishment
everyday life
laughter
media stereotypes
rural tundra village
sentimental pessimism
storytelling
Loading...