Pili‘Oha/Kinship: (Re)Imagining Perceptions of Nature and More-Than-Human Relationality
This essay draws from a larger ethnographic study looking at the complex contextuality of biodiversity conservation in Hawaii. This article uses vignettes to communicate its focus. These vignettes are autoethnographic by nature, but are pushed further through the use of diffractive methodology (Bara...
Main Author: | Kimberley Greeson |
---|---|
Format: | Article |
Language: | English |
Published: |
University of Alberta
2019-07-01
|
Series: | Imaginations: Journal of Cross-Cultural Media Studies |
Subjects: | |
Online Access: | https://journals.library.ualberta.ca/imaginations/index.php/imaginations/article/view/29434 |
Similar Items
-
Threats to native aquatic insect biodiversity in Hawaiʻi and the Pacific, and challenges in their conservation
by: Englund, R. A (Ronald A.)
Published: (2009) -
Re-conceptualizing risk : adolescents in Hawaiʻi talk about rebellion and respect
by: Mayeda, David T (David Tokiharu)
Published: (2009) -
The perception of psychological and physical symptom severity : demographic and psychosocial correlates
by: Anderson, Robert Milford, 1943
Published: (2009) -
Makai--mauka: Fishing and farming on the Island of Hawaii in A.D. 1778
by: Newman, T. Stell (Thomas Stell)
Published: (2009) -
Islands under the influence : Hawaii and two centuries of dependent development
by: Kent, Noel J
Published: (2009)