Results 221 to 230 of about 11,297 (307)

Can the Philosopher Change the World? The Enduring Relevance of Anticolonial Marxism in an Era of Decoloniality

open access: yesAntipode, Volume 58, Issue 2, March 2026.
Abstract Decolonial theory (DT) has been advanced as a strategy for decolonisation alternative to 20th‐century anticolonialism, positioning decolonisation as an epistemic project rather than a historical‐material one. Here, I examine DT's arguments about anticolonialism: that it had a dogmatic bias towards nationalism and postcolonial state formation ...
Lavanya Nott
wiley   +1 more source

Homological Correspondence: Israel as a Frontier of Global Domination

open access: yesAntipode, Volume 58, Issue 2, March 2026.
ABSTRACT This article offers a novel framing for enquiring the deep entanglement between Israel and Western‐led global centers of domination. Moving beyond geopolitical reasonings and historical analogies, it locates this relationship within a dynamic space of homological correspondence, positioning Israel as its frontier.
Wassim Ghantous
wiley   +1 more source

Resistance, Creativity, and Critique in Researching With Children Through Arts‐Based Narrative Inquiry: Aporetics of Subalternity as Methodological Knowledge in Education

open access: yesEuropean Journal of Education, Volume 61, Issue 1, March 2026.
ABSTRACT This article contributes to efforts to challenge adult‐centred educational research through an arts‐based narrative inquiry co‐composed with Octávio, Raposa, Cármen and Flávio—children aged 6 to 10 from minority communities in Brazil and Portugal.
André Freitas   +1 more
wiley   +1 more source

“Seen Again”: Ethnography, Immersive Technologies, and Temporality in the Siberian Collections at the Pitt Rivers Museum

open access: yesMuseum Anthropology, Volume 49, Issue 1, Spring 2026.
ABSTRACT This paper proposes Virtual Reality (VR) and 360 film as promising fieldwork tools for addressing problematic temporalities in ethnographic museums and for collaborating with communities of origin. Focusing on the Maria Czaplicka Siberian collections at the Pitt Rivers Museum, Oxford, we examine how previous methods of display marginalized the
Anya Gleizer   +2 more
wiley   +1 more source

Reaching for Ancestral Heritage: Sakha Collections in the Museums of the World

open access: yesMuseum Anthropology, Volume 49, Issue 1, Spring 2026.
ABSTRACT This paper is devoted to the collections of old Sakha objects produced by Indigenous craftsmen in the north of the Russian Empire and now located in many museums around the world. For several centuries, objects representing Sakha material culture were taken away from their place of origin by explorers, scholars, collectors, and missionaries ...
Tatiana Argounova‐Low
wiley   +1 more source

Tracing Taonga Trajectories: A Methodological Framework for Indigenous Heritage Mapping

open access: yesJournal of the Royal Society of New Zealand, Volume 56, Issue 1, February 2026.
Rangitāhua is a tupuna to Ngāti Kuri and represents the iwi's geographic and ancestral connection to the Pacific. Despite this millennium‐long ancestral tie, Ngāti Kuri's access to Rangitāhua has been severed for two centuries. Meanwhile, many European expeditions visited the islands, extracting and distributing natural history taonga across ...
Marina Ferrari de Aquino Klemm   +4 more
wiley   +1 more source

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