🚚 Free Worldwide Shipping on All Orders!Shop Now
Let The River Flow: An Eco-Indigenous Uprising and Its Legacy in Art, Ecology and Politics
HomeStore

Let The River Flow: An Eco-Indigenous Uprising and Its Legacy in Art, Ecology and Politics

Let The River Flow: An Eco-Indigenous Uprising and Its Legacy in Art, Ecology and Politics

Let the River Flow takes the eco-indigenous action against the construction of a hydroelectric power plant in the Altaelva river in Northern Norway during the late 1970s and early ’80s as its starting point. The series of massive protests led by the Sámi people grew into an unexpectedly broad movement of solidarity across society, in which artists played a pivotal role. This book reflects on events at the time and their correlations with artists’ eco-actions worldwide today. It addresses the political, cultural, and artistic aspects, including political organising, new influences of indigenous thinking on contemporary politics, and the centrality of artists within these activities.

240 pages, 23.5 x 16.5 cm, paperback, Valiz (Amsterdam).

$29.94
Let The River Flow: An Eco-Indigenous Uprising and Its Legacy in Art, Ecology and Politics—
$29.94

More Images

Let The River Flow: An Eco-Indigenous Uprising and Its Legacy in Art, Ecology and Politics - Image 2
Let The River Flow: An Eco-Indigenous Uprising and Its Legacy in Art, Ecology and Politics - Image 3
Let The River Flow: An Eco-Indigenous Uprising and Its Legacy in Art, Ecology and Politics - Image 4
Let The River Flow: An Eco-Indigenous Uprising and Its Legacy in Art, Ecology and Politics - Image 5
Let The River Flow: An Eco-Indigenous Uprising and Its Legacy in Art, Ecology and Politics - Image 6
Let The River Flow: An Eco-Indigenous Uprising and Its Legacy in Art, Ecology and Politics - Image 7

Let The River Flow: An Eco-Indigenous Uprising and Its Legacy in Art, Ecology and Politics

Let the River Flow takes the eco-indigenous action against the construction of a hydroelectric power plant in the Altaelva river in Northern Norway during the late 1970s and early ’80s as its starting point. The series of massive protests led by the Sámi people grew into an unexpectedly broad movement of solidarity across society, in which artists played a pivotal role. This book reflects on events at the time and their correlations with artists’ eco-actions worldwide today. It addresses the political, cultural, and artistic aspects, including political organising, new influences of indigenous thinking on contemporary politics, and the centrality of artists within these activities.

240 pages, 23.5 x 16.5 cm, paperback, Valiz (Amsterdam).

Product Information

Shipping & Returns

Description

Let the River Flow takes the eco-indigenous action against the construction of a hydroelectric power plant in the Altaelva river in Northern Norway during the late 1970s and early ’80s as its starting point. The series of massive protests led by the Sámi people grew into an unexpectedly broad movement of solidarity across society, in which artists played a pivotal role. This book reflects on events at the time and their correlations with artists’ eco-actions worldwide today. It addresses the political, cultural, and artistic aspects, including political organising, new influences of indigenous thinking on contemporary politics, and the centrality of artists within these activities.

240 pages, 23.5 x 16.5 cm, paperback, Valiz (Amsterdam).