Results 131 to 140 of about 138,377 (265)

National Relics: Secular Sacrality, Museums, and Heritage‐Making in Nineteenth‐Century Chile

open access: yesMuseum Anthropology, Volume 49, Issue 2, Fall 2026.
ABSTRACT This article examines how objects and bodily remains are transformed and ritualized into national relics through collecting and exhibiting practices in museums. Focusing on nineteenth‐century Chile, it draws on archival sources, material culture theory, and the anthropology of religion to argue that objects associated with Chile's nation‐state
Hugo Rueda Ramírez
wiley   +1 more source

Martin Heidegger’s Path to an Aesthetic ετηος [PDF]

open access: yes, 2005
Martin Heidegger is infamous for his rejection of the validity of Ethics as a philosophical endeavour and moreover, for his aesthetic formulation of ετηος.
Brook, Angus
core   +1 more source

A Team Is Built on Trust: In‐Group Trust Formation and Trust Generalisation in European Football Fans

open access: yesContemporary European Politics, Volume 4, Issue 2, June 2026.
ABSTRACT This paper investigates the association between football fandom, interpersonal trust and social cohesion across Europe. Drawing on a representative four‐country survey (Germany, Norway, Poland, Spain) and employing structural equation modelling, the study examines whether and how identification as a fan contributes to trust in fellow citizens ...
Jonas Biel
wiley   +1 more source

Experiences of Bereaved Māori Whānau in Out‐of‐Hospital Death Where Emergency Ambulance Services Respond

open access: yesKōtuitui: New Zealand Journal of Social Sciences Online, Volume 21, Issue 2, June 2026.
Māori are disproportionately affected by out‐of‐hospital deaths due to higher rates of cardiac arrest and lower survival outcomes. Ambulance personnel are often the only healthcare professionals present during events, making their role in supporting bereaved whānau (families) critical.
Eillish Satchell   +4 more
wiley   +1 more source

Racialized Labor Intermediation: Managing the “Threat” of Kurdish Workers on Turkish Farms

open access: yesAmerican Anthropologist, Volume 128, Issue 2, Page 381-392, June 2026.
ABSTRACT Farm labor intermediaries in Turkey have been at the heart of maintaining a precarious and low‐wage migrant labor force for capitalist agriculture since the 19th century. This labor force has been predominantly comprised of Kurds, a people racialized as “savage,” “racially impure,” and “traitors of the Turkish nation” since the beginning of ...
Deniz Duruiz
wiley   +1 more source

A Survey of Amish Tunebooks: Categorizing Slow Tunes by Date of Origin

open access: yesThe Journal of Amish and Plain Anabaptist Studies, 2013
A survey of Notabücher (tune books) currently used by geographically diverse Amish communities leads to the conclusion that Amish slow tunes can be placed into three categories according to date of origin.
Gracia Schlabach
doaj  

Recovering the lost Moravian history of William Blake's family [PDF]

open access: yes, 2004
This paper seeks to amend and extend Keri Davies’s essay on Blake’s mother published in Blake/An Illustrated Quarterly in 1999. There, he established that Blake’s mother Catherine’s true maiden name was Wright, and that Thomas Armitage, her first husband,
Davies, K, Schuchard, MK
core  

Managing death in exile

open access: yesAnthropology and Humanism, Volume 51, Issue 1, June 2026.
Abstract Managing Death in Exile is a theatrical performance that draws on ethnographic research with long‐term asylum‐seekers from sub‐Saharan Africa in Hong Kong since 2012. The performance told the story of Denise (pseudonym), who had to manage the illness, funeral, cremation, and repatriation of ashes of her good friend, Rosie (pseudonym). Dying in
Sealing Cheng
wiley   +1 more source

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