Results 1 to 10 of about 25 (25)

Politics, Ideology and Landscape: Early Christian Tigranakert in Artsakh

open access: yesElectrum, 2021
Tigranakert in Artsakh was founded at the end of 90s BC by the Armenian King Tigranes II the Great (95–55 BC) and in the Early Christian period continued to play a role of an important military-administrative and religious center.
Hamlet Petrosyan
doaj   +1 more source

Timerendering: reflections on chronopolitical praxis in Bolivia

open access: yesJournal of the Royal Anthropological Institute, Volume 28, Issue 3, Page 788-806, September 2022., 2022
Abstract This article uses reflections on chronopolitical praxis during the period 2006‐19 in Bolivia in order to make a more general contribution to the anthropology of time and temporalities. The article proposes the theoretical concept of ‘timerendering’ in order to examine the ways in which time emerged as a pervasive register that mediated and ...
Mark Goodale
wiley   +1 more source

Civil war and the non‐linearity of time: approaching a Mozambican politics of irreconciliation

open access: yesJournal of the Royal Anthropological Institute, Volume 28, Issue S1, Page 50-64, April 2022., 2022
Abstract At least 1 million people died during the Mozambican civil war (1976/7‐92). Unfolding after gaining independence from Portugal (1975) and alongside experiments with Afro‐socialism in the 1980s, the war, despite its brutality, has not been subjected to global templates of reconciliation processes.
Bjørn Enge Bertelsen
wiley   +1 more source

Irreconcilable times

open access: yesJournal of the Royal Anthropological Institute, Volume 28, Issue S1, Page 153-178, April 2022., 2022
Abstract In Denktagebuch (Thought diary, 1950‐73), Hannah Arendt wrote that acts which cannot be forgiven are beyond punishment and hence cannot be reconciled to. In this essay, I draw from Arendt to further theorize and extend the concept of irreconciliation.
Nayanika Mookherjee
wiley   +1 more source

‘Our therapeutic direction is towards Light’: transcendence and a non‐secular politics of difference in Islamic Counselling training

open access: yesJournal of the Royal Anthropological Institute, Volume 30, Issue 2, Page 417-435, June 2024.
Abstract The Islamic Counselling training model discussed in this article first emerged in 1990s multicultural Britain within the newly expanding field of cross‐cultural counselling and psychotherapy. It is informed by classical Sufi notions of the self, the development of an Islamic psychology, and decolonial scholarship.
Sabnum Dharamsi, Giulia Liberatore
wiley   +1 more source
Some of the next articles are maybe not open access.

Lexical acquisition in the eraly school years

Trends in Language Acquisition Research, 2004
Julie E Dockrell, David Messer
exaly  

Early Christian Archaeology: A State of the Field

Religion Compass, 2008
Kim Bowes
exaly  

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