id author title date pages extension mime words sentences flesch summary cache txt work_phmzg4h2mfhr3fj6tmjr55t72y Guido Abbattista Trophying human 'otherness'. From Christopher Columbus to contemporary ethno-ecology (fifteenth-twenty first centuries) 2013 23 .pdf application/pdf 11740 634 56 By 'live ethno-exhibitions' I mean the practice of capturing or alluring and exhibiting them in public spectacles designed to parade human diversity, particular later performances we refer to as 'live ethno-exhibitions'. culture" and early modern forms both of exotic ethno-exhibitions and of public Both ancient triumphs and modern exotic exhibitions involved, early modern celebrations and rites but also features of later ethno-exhibitions, Park, 1990); Anthony Miller, Roman Triumphs and Early Modern English Culture (BasingstokeNew York: Palgrave, 2001). evidence both of the triumphal use of exotic human trophies and of ethno-shows, As in a Roman triumph, these alien human figures were paraded as live human trophies re-enacted and systematized early modern practices in a methods of alien, exotic human exhibitions on behalf of the natural environment and keeping alive a debate on 21st century live human ethno-exhibitions, most Are these sorts of exhibitions of live human aliens as trophies to be considered ./cache/work_phmzg4h2mfhr3fj6tmjr55t72y.pdf ./txt/work_phmzg4h2mfhr3fj6tmjr55t72y.txt