Future Rivers of the Anthropocene
One meaning of the word Tlingit is “people of the tides.” Immediately, this identification with tides introduces a palpable experience of the aquatic as well as a keen sense of place. It is a universal truth that the human animal has co-evolved over millennia with water or the lack of it, developing...
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University of Minnesota Libraries Publishing
2021
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fttriple:oai:gotriple.eu:oai:doaj.org/article:884d6d224d1c4a37bf29e00a3a58c0fe 2023-05-15T18:33:21+02:00 Future Rivers of the Anthropocene 2021-11-01 https://doaj.org/article/884d6d224d1c4a37bf29e00a3a58c0fe en eng University of Minnesota Libraries Publishing 2471-190X https://doaj.org/article/884d6d224d1c4a37bf29e00a3a58c0fe undefined Open Rivers, Iss Issue Nineteen : Fall 2021 (2021) indigenous perspectives north america policy research phil anthro-se Journal Article https://vocabularies.coar-repositories.org/resource_types/c_6501/ 2021 fttriple 2023-01-22T19:12:00Z One meaning of the word Tlingit is “people of the tides.” Immediately, this identification with tides introduces a palpable experience of the aquatic as well as a keen sense of place. It is a universal truth that the human animal has co-evolved over millennia with water or the lack of it, developing nuanced, sophisticated and intimate water knowledges. However, there is little in the anthropological or geographical record that showcases contemporary Indigenous societies upholding customary laws concerning their relationship with water, and more precisely how this dictates their philosophy of place. Article in Journal/Newspaper tlingit Unknown |
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English |
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indigenous perspectives north america policy research phil anthro-se |
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indigenous perspectives north america policy research phil anthro-se Future Rivers of the Anthropocene |
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indigenous perspectives north america policy research phil anthro-se |
description |
One meaning of the word Tlingit is “people of the tides.” Immediately, this identification with tides introduces a palpable experience of the aquatic as well as a keen sense of place. It is a universal truth that the human animal has co-evolved over millennia with water or the lack of it, developing nuanced, sophisticated and intimate water knowledges. However, there is little in the anthropological or geographical record that showcases contemporary Indigenous societies upholding customary laws concerning their relationship with water, and more precisely how this dictates their philosophy of place. |
format |
Article in Journal/Newspaper |
title |
Future Rivers of the Anthropocene |
title_short |
Future Rivers of the Anthropocene |
title_full |
Future Rivers of the Anthropocene |
title_fullStr |
Future Rivers of the Anthropocene |
title_full_unstemmed |
Future Rivers of the Anthropocene |
title_sort |
future rivers of the anthropocene |
publisher |
University of Minnesota Libraries Publishing |
publishDate |
2021 |
url |
https://doaj.org/article/884d6d224d1c4a37bf29e00a3a58c0fe |
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tlingit |
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tlingit |
op_source |
Open Rivers, Iss Issue Nineteen : Fall 2021 (2021) |
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2471-190X https://doaj.org/article/884d6d224d1c4a37bf29e00a3a58c0fe |
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