- Dreamtime
Concerning the Boundary Between Wilderness and Civilization Resource Type: Book Published: 2985 Dreamtime celebrates the simultaneity of contraries at the crossroads of the logical and the mythic mind. "The 'dream place' is everywhere and nowhere, just like the 'dreamtime' is always and never." It was, after all, predictable from the time when scientific specialization began in earnest early in this century that the most fascinating insights into the human mind and the culture it has left behind would occur wherever people observe two pathways crossing.
- Encyclopedia of Anthropology
Resource Type: Book
- Encyclopedia of Cultural Anthropology
Resource Type: Book
- Encyclopedia of the Social Sciences
Resource Type: Book Published: 1935
- For Reasons of State
Resource Type: Book
- The Freudian Left
Wilhelm Reich, Geza Roheim, Herbert Marcuse Resource Type: Book Published: 1969 Paul Robinson tries to define a particular tradition in the history of psychoanalysis - the "radical" or "left-wing" tradition - through an analysis of its three most important representatives: Wilhelm Reich, Geza Roheim, and Herbert Marcuse.
- The Mammoth and the Mouse
Microhistory and Morphology Resource Type: Book Published: 1997
- Marx, Freud, and the Critique of Everyday Life
Toward a Permanent Revolution Resource Type: Book Published: 1974
- Memorial University of Newfoundland
Media Profile in Sources Resource Type: Organization
- The Origin of the Family, Private Property and the State
Resource Type: Book Published: 1884
- Pictures Bring Us Messages
Sinaakssiiksi aohtsimaahpihkookiyaawa. Photographs and Histories from the Kainai Nation Resource Type: Book Published: 2006 An example of museum professionals working with member of an aboriginal community to explore photographs taken of members of that community many decades earlier.
- Royal BC Museum
Media Profile in Sources Resource Type: Organization
- Social Sciences and Humanities Research Council
Media Profile in Sources Resource Type: Organization
- Stone Age Economics
Resource Type: Book Published: 1972
- Strange Fruit
Why Both Sides Are Wrong in the Race Debate Resource Type: Book Published: 2008 Malik makes the case that most anti-racists accept the belief, also held by racialists and outright racists, that differences between groups are of great importance. While racialists attribute the differences to biology, anti-racists attribute them to deep-rooted cultural traditions which are typically seen as inherent in the group. Malik argues that these positions are actually quite similar, and makes the case that racism and racial inequality are best combatted by focusing not on our differences but on what unites us. Malik also strongly criticizes the cultural relativism of many anti-racists, and their increasing tendency to reject science as some kind of western imperialist conspiracy to oppress the rest of the world.
- University of Waterloo
Media Profile in Sources Resource Type: Organization
- University of Winnipeg
Media Profile in Sources Resource Type: Organization
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