Her face is tucked under a solid wave inside a whalebone. She is Sedna, the sea goddess who lives in the cold waters of the Arctic, where she is feared and revered by hunters and those traveling on ...
Germaine Arnaktauyok and Neil Christopher; Inhabit Media, 2024; 72 pages; $28.95. Every human society holds its own creation myths. For millennia, until science arrived with its factual but ...
Edited by Neil Christopher, Noel McDermott, and Louise Flaherty; Illustrated by Germaine Arnattaujaq; Inhabit Media Inc., 2024; 320 pages; $34.95. “It is difficult, if not impossible, for any person ...
Since late last summer, The Fast Runner, the first feature-length movie made almost wholly by the aboriginal people of the Arctic, has been playing to packed houses. Released on DVD earlier this month ...
Long ago in the far north, there lived a village of people known as Inuit. They lived on the shores of the icy Arctic, and they depended upon the bounty of the salmon and seal and the creatures of the ...
For more than a decade, Beatrice Deer has mixed traditional Inuit throat singing and indie-rock in a style that she cleverly calls "Inuindie." Half-Inuk and half-Mohawk, her voice is slinky and raw, ...
Here are four exciting Inuit folktales--Akavak, Tiktaliktak, The White Archer, and Wolf Run--collected for the first time in one beautiful volume. Houston's striking illustrations for each story bring ...
Here’s the main thing about “The Fast Runner,” a strange and memorable movie that comes to us from the Canadian Arctic and is the first feature ever made in Inuktitut, language of the Inuit people: ...
You have never seen a movie like The Fast Runner — unless, of course, you’ve seen another snowy Inuit-Eskimo romantic thriller about a blood feud that lasts for generations. From its mystical-mythical ...
The Artic sky -- The universe -- Stars, constellations, and planets -- Sun, moon, and eclipses -- The atmosphere -- Navigation -- Time -- Igloolik legends -- Inuktitut transcriptions -- Selected ...
For more than a decade, Beatrice Deer has mixed traditional Inuit throat singing and indie-rock in a style that she cleverly calls "Inuindie." Half-Inuk and half-Mohawk, her voice is slinky and raw, ...
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