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466 results for "Cultural Revolution" — page 5 of 24
H_3_19 — Indigenous Knowledge Destruction: Colonial Erasure & Residential Schools
The destruction of indigenous knowledge systems represents one of history's most comprehensive and deliberate episodes of cultural erasure, spanning from the Spanish burning of Maya codices in the 16th century to the res
H_3_10 — Museum Ethics — Who Owns the Past?
The question of who owns the past — and specifically, who has rightful custody of archaeological objects, cultural artifacts, and human remains — is the central ethical controversy in contemporary museum practice. The de
H_4_18 — Forbidden History: How Civilizations Erase Predecessors
A recurring pattern across human history is the systematic erasure, suppression, or appropriation of predecessor cultures by their successors — a phenomenon that operates through multiple mechanisms: physical destruction
ZE_2_14 — Moral Inversion — How Good Becomes Evil Across Cultures
Moral inversion — the process by which entities, symbols, or practices formerly regarded as good or sacred become redefined as evil — is a recurring pattern across cultures that serves political, theological, and ideolog
R_2_12 — Tool Use in Animals: Corvids, Primates, Dolphins, and Cognitive Evolution
Tool use — the employment of an external object to alter the form, position, or condition of another object or organism — was once considered uniquely human, a defining cognitive threshold separating Homo sapiens from al
F_4_15 — Bell Beaker Phenomenon and European Transformation
The Bell Beaker phenomenon (c. 2750–1800 BCE) is one of the most geographically extensive and archaeologically debated cultural manifestations of European prehistory. Named after the distinctive bell-shaped drinking vess
F_4_27 — Hunter-Gatherer Societies: Lifeways, Ecology, and the Transition to Agriculture
For over 95% of Homo sapiens history, all humans lived as hunter-gatherers — mobile foragers whose subsistence depended on wild plants, animals, and aquatic resources. Modern ethnographic and archaeological evidence has
F_3_07 — Independent Origins of Plant Domestication
Plant domestication — the process by which wild species are genetically and morphologically transformed through human selection into cultivable, human-dependent crops — arose independently in at least 7–11 geographically
F_3_09 — Musical Instrument Diffusion and Shared Traditions
Musical instruments represent some of the oldest artifacts of human culture and their distribution patterns across the globe illuminate deep connections — and sometimes startling independent inventions — among widely sep
M_5_17 — Natufian Culture: Proto-Agriculture, Sedentism, and the Neolithic Transition
The Natufian culture (ca. 14,500–11,600 years ago) was an Epipalaeolithic archaeological culture of the Levant — spanning modern Israel, Palestine, Jordan, Lebanon, and Syria — that represents the earliest known transiti
M_5_25 — Anatolian Archaeological Frontiers: Göbekli Tepe to Troy
Anatolia (modern Turkey) is among the most archaeologically significant regions on Earth, containing sites that fundamentally challenge conventional timelines of human civilization. Göbekli Tepe (c. 9600–8000 BCE), excav
M_4_03 — Archaeological Dating Disputes and Controversies
Archaeological dating methods — the techniques used to determine the age of artifacts, structures, and deposits — are the backbone of all claims about the human past. Radiocarbon dating (carbon-14 analysis, developed by
M_4_04 — Library Destructions and Lost Knowledge Catalogs
The deliberate or accidental destruction of libraries and knowledge repositories is one of humanity's recurring tragedies. From the Library of Alexandria (whose gradual destruction eliminated perhaps 400,000–700,000 scro
M_4_02 — Proto-Agriculture and Managed Landscapes
This document examines Proto-Agriculture and Managed Landscapes, a topic within the Forbidden Archaeology research area. Key areas of investigation include The "Neolithic Revolution" Concept, Independent Invention: A Glo
U_1_12 — Hip-Hop Culture: MCing, DJing, Breaking, and Graffiti as Art Form
Hip-hop — originating in the South Bronx, New York City, in the early-to-mid-1970s — is among the most culturally consequential artistic movements of the 20th century, growing from block-party culture in economically dev
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_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_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_5_10 — Architecture as Cultural Expression: Sacred and Civic Space
Architecture — the design and construction of buildings and spatial environments — is simultaneously a practical art (shelter, function, structure) and a profound form of cultural expression, embodying a society's cosmol
U_5_27 — Mnemonic Systems Across Cultures: Memory as Engineered Technology
Mnemonic systems are deliberately engineered cultural technologies for storing, retrieving, and transmitting knowledge across generations without writing. The peer-reviewed cognitive psychology literature confirms that t
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