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401 results for "Nok culture" — page 11 of 21
U_1_10 — Theatre History: From Greek Tragedy to Global Performance
Theatre — the live performance of dramatic narrative by actors before an audience — is among the oldest and most enduring human art forms, arising independently in multiple civilizations and undergoing continuous reinven
U_1_08 — Carnival, Festival, and Celebration
Carnival, festivals, and celebrations — periodic communal events characterized by heightened sensory experience, relaxation or inversion of social norms, shared feasting, music, costume, and collective joy — are universa
U_1_04 — Origins of Theater & Drama — Ritual to Stage
Theater and drama emerged independently in multiple civilizations from ritual performance traditions — the formal separation of performers and audience, the creation of fictional narrative embodied by actors, and the use
U_1_06 — Folk Music and Ethnomusicology
Folk music broadly refers to traditional music transmitted orally within communities, typically without known individual composers, evolving through collective performance practice. Ethnomusicology is the academic study
U_1_00 — Music Sound Performance: Subfolder Summary
U_1_14 — World Dance Traditions: Ballet, Bharatanatyam, Flamenco, and Hula
Dance — the oldest art form, predating language, visual art, and music in some theoretical models — is the organization of human movement in time and space for expressive, ritual, social, or aesthetic purposes. Every kno
U_3_09 — Metalwork and Blacksmithing Traditions
Metalworking — the shaping of metals by heating, hammering, casting, and alloying — is one of humanity's most transformative technological achievements and a major domain of artistic expression. Origins: native copper wa
U_3_08 — Glassmaking and Stained Glass
Glass — an amorphous solid formed by rapidly cooling molten silica (SiO₂) with fluxes (soda/potash to lower melting temperature) and stabilizers (lime to prevent water solubility) — has been manufactured for ~5,000 years
U_3_02 — Untitled
Textile arts represent one of humanity's oldest and most informationally dense technologies — encoding cultural knowledge, social identity, mathematical systems, trade networks, and historical narratives within fiber, pa
U_3_18 — Ancient Metallurgy and Material Innovation
Ancient metallurgy — the extraction, alloying, and shaping of metals from raw ores — was among the most transformative technological achievements of human civilization, enabling new tools, weapons, agricultural implement
U_3_03 — Ancient Jewelry, Adornment & Shell Bead Trade
Personal adornment is among the oldest archaeological markers of symbolic behavior, with the earliest known ornaments — perforated Nassarius shell beads from Blombos Cave, South Africa, and sites in North Africa and the
U_3_12 — Tapestry: Bayeux, Unicorn, and Narrative Textile Art
Tapestry — a form of textile art produced by weaving colored weft threads through plain warp threads on a loom, creating pictorial or decorative designs — is one of the most labor-intensive, expensive, and prestigious ar
U_3_11 — Board Games and Games of Strategy
Board games — structured games played on a marked surface (board) with pieces, dice, cards, or tokens according to defined rules — are among the oldest and most culturally revealing human artifacts. Ancient games: the Ro
U_3_07 — Paper and Papermaking Traditions
Paper — a matted sheet of plant fibers — is one of civilization's most transformative inventions, enabling the preservation and dissemination of knowledge at scales impossible with earlier writing surfaces. Pre-paper wri
U_3_06 — Woodworking and Carpentry Traditions
Woodworking — the shaping of wood for functional and aesthetic purposes — is among the oldest human technologies, predating metalworking by millennia. Archaeological evidence: the Schöningen spears (Germany, ~300,000 yea
U_3_13 — Art Restoration and Conservation: Science Meets Aesthetics
Art restoration and conservation — the practice of preserving, stabilizing, and (sometimes controversially) restoring works of art — sits at the intersection of science, aesthetics, ethics, and cultural politics. Every a
U_3_04 — Fermentation, Brewing & Sacred Beverages
Fermentation — the biochemical conversion of sugars to alcohol and carbon dioxide by yeast and bacteria — is among humanity's oldest biotechnologies, with evidence of intentional fermented beverages dating to the Jiahu r
U_3_05 — Fashion and Costume History
Fashion — from Latin factio (making, doing) — encompasses clothing, accessories, and bodily presentation as systems of social communication, aesthetic expression, and cultural identity. Archaeological evidence: the oldes
U_3_14 — Vernacular Architecture: Indigenous, Anti-Colonial, and Resistance Design
Vernacular architecture — buildings designed and constructed by their inhabitants or local builders using traditional techniques, local materials, and accumulated environmental knowledge, without the intervention of prof
U_3_10 — Printmaking and the History of the Book
Printmaking — the creation of images or text by transferring ink from a prepared surface to paper or other substrate — and the history of the book are intertwined stories of how humans multiplied information. Relief prin
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