In Arctic Dreams and Nightmares Alootook Ipellie argues that the harsh reality of life in the Arctic landscape has been a deciding factor in the development of Inuit literature, for Inuit \u27live in the remote Arctic, relatively isolated from the rest of the world\u27 (xiv), and have therefore been able to retain much of their language and culture. He goes on to suggest that the resilience of the Inuit and a pride in their tradition have helped them to retain their traditional mythology and preserve it for future generations
As the Arctic switches to “new normal” it is being re-imagined once again ‒ region is viewed from th...
Magdalena Zolkos Jyväskylä University, Finland Goethe University Frankfurt, Germany The Greenlandic...
This article deals with the concept of Arctic Drama, which is about how there is a relationship betw...
In the nineteenth and early twentieth centuries, a stream of popular narratives celebrated the stru...
Because he is "living between cultures," Alootook Ipellie, the poet, cartoonist, columnist, and edit...
The late polar exploration period—spanning from the 1890s to the 1930s—was categorised as European p...
Prior to contact with European culture, Eskimos in the circumpolar world had a highly developed oral...
This project is both a creative and critical foray into Inuit mythology. The Critical Preface unpack...
The Arctic has long appeared to outsiders as a vast, forbidding wasteland or, alternatively, as a st...
Visitors to the Arctic enter places that have been traditionally imagined as otherworldly. This stra...
ABSTRACT. The peoples in the arctic regions have experienced unprecedented cultural change in the la...
Includes bibliographical references and index.Ninety years ago, Knud Rasmussen's popular account of ...
In Inukjuak (Nunavik) the existence of tuurngait is entrenched in local cosmology and is part of the...
Visitors to the Arctic enter places that have been traditionally imagined as otherworldly. This stra...
This thesis is about the Inuit effort to adapt to a changing arctic environment through their engage...
As the Arctic switches to “new normal” it is being re-imagined once again ‒ region is viewed from th...
Magdalena Zolkos Jyväskylä University, Finland Goethe University Frankfurt, Germany The Greenlandic...
This article deals with the concept of Arctic Drama, which is about how there is a relationship betw...
In the nineteenth and early twentieth centuries, a stream of popular narratives celebrated the stru...
Because he is "living between cultures," Alootook Ipellie, the poet, cartoonist, columnist, and edit...
The late polar exploration period—spanning from the 1890s to the 1930s—was categorised as European p...
Prior to contact with European culture, Eskimos in the circumpolar world had a highly developed oral...
This project is both a creative and critical foray into Inuit mythology. The Critical Preface unpack...
The Arctic has long appeared to outsiders as a vast, forbidding wasteland or, alternatively, as a st...
Visitors to the Arctic enter places that have been traditionally imagined as otherworldly. This stra...
ABSTRACT. The peoples in the arctic regions have experienced unprecedented cultural change in the la...
Includes bibliographical references and index.Ninety years ago, Knud Rasmussen's popular account of ...
In Inukjuak (Nunavik) the existence of tuurngait is entrenched in local cosmology and is part of the...
Visitors to the Arctic enter places that have been traditionally imagined as otherworldly. This stra...
This thesis is about the Inuit effort to adapt to a changing arctic environment through their engage...
As the Arctic switches to “new normal” it is being re-imagined once again ‒ region is viewed from th...
Magdalena Zolkos Jyväskylä University, Finland Goethe University Frankfurt, Germany The Greenlandic...
This article deals with the concept of Arctic Drama, which is about how there is a relationship betw...