ALL OUR RELATIONS: Re-Animating the Mi’kmaw Landscape on Nova Scotia’s Chignecto Peninsula
The current volume challenges its contributors to reconsider human dwelling in the Far Northeast from 3000 BP until the arrival of Europeans. We welcome this opportunity, in part, because we are among a growing group of researchers who are exploring the deep pasts of Indigenous peoples by combining...
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Format: | Buchkapitel |
Sprache: | eng |
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Zusammenfassung: | The current volume challenges its contributors to reconsider human dwelling in the Far Northeast from 3000 BP until the arrival of Europeans. We welcome this opportunity, in part, because we are among a growing group of researchers who are exploring the deep pasts of Indigenous peoples by combining local Indigenous and Eurocentric ways of observing and interpreting the world (see Bartlett 2011; Julien et al. 2016; Laluk 2017; Lepofsky et al. 2017). The broad objective of our research has been to understand Teloltipnik L’nuk, or how L’nuk (the People) lived on the Chignecto Peninsula—a 1,500 km² triangle of land |
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DOI: | 10.2307/j.ctv2kzv0n0.13 |