Showing 1 - 6 results of 6 for search '"modernism"', query time: 0.02s Refine Results
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    Against global archaeological ethics: critical views from South America by Curtoni, Rafael Pedro

    Published 2015
    “…Archaeology as a discipline has been formed largely as a nation-state biopolitical device generating narratives and actions of control, management, classification, and ordering of persons and objects, pasts and presents, their stories, relationships and spaces from a Anglo-Saxon modern mode of knowledge production. In that sense, hegemonic archeology bears its colonial imprint and exhibits the principles that characterize modern Western science of universality, objectivity and rationalism. …”
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    A summary of the interdisciplinary lines of evidence for reconstructing early human occupation and paleoenvironment in the Pampean region, Argentina by Martinez, Gustavo Adolfo, Gutierrez, Maria Amelia

    Published 2011
    “…Among these sites, Paso Otero 5 is characterized by the presence of extinct megamammals and modern species in association with fish-tail projectile points chronology located between ca. 10,400-10,200 years BP. …”
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    10,000 years of mandibular evolution in southern South America: Implications for morphological diversification by Menendez, Lumila Paula, Sardi, Marina Laura, Scheifler, Nahuel Alberto, Gonzalez, Mariela Edith, Messineo, Pablo Geronimo, Politis, Gustavo Gabriel

    Published 2019
    “…South America (SA) was the last continent to be colonized by modern humans. One of the relevant research questions that still remain to be addressed is how SA populations became differentiated. …”
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    A History of Book Publishing in Contemporary Latin America by Sora, Gustavo Alejandro

    Published 2021
    “…This book presents a cultural history of Latin America as seen through a symbolic good and a practice – the book, and the act of publication – two elements that have had an irrefutable power in shaping the modern world. The volume combines multiple theoretical approaches and empirical landscapes with the aim to comprehend how Latin American publishers became the protagonists of a symbolic unification of their continent from the 1930s through the 1970s. …”
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