Pia Arke (“ar-keh”) made “mongrel” art about a “hysteria” among women of this ethnicity, whose study at natural history museums inspired Kenn Harper’s Give Me My Father’s Body. For 10 points each:
[10m] Name this ethnicity of the women given involuntary IUDs in the Coil Campaign. The Utimut process repatriates heritage taken from this ethnic group on the Thule (“TOO-lee”) expeditions.
ANSWER: Inuit [or Inuk; accept Greenlandic Inuit, Grønlandsk Inuit, Kalaallit, Inughuit, Inuhuit, Ilvit, or Tunumiit; accept Eskimos] (Many Inuit people regard the term “Eskimo” as pejorative. The “Arctic hysteria” is piblokto. Harper’s book is about Minik Wallace at the American Museum of Natural History.)
[10e] This country apologized for its Inuit “experiment children” but not its Virgin Islands slavery. Activists protested its sugar wealth by writing “racist fish” on its Little Mermaid statue.
ANSWER: Denmark [or Kingdom of Denmark, Danish Realm, Danmark, or Danmarki, accept Danish Empire, Denmark–Norway, Danish West Indies, Danish Virgin Islands, Danish Antilles, Dansk Vestindien, Danske Jomfruøer, or “Little Danes” experiment]
[10h] Specific term required. Denmark excluded Greenlandic and Faroese “minority literature” from these things defining its culture. The Dutch version of them added themes on Caribbean islands and Anton de Kom’s We Slaves of Suriname.
ANSWER: canons [accept Canon of the Netherlands, Canon of Dutch History, Canon van Nederland, region canons, or Canon of Curaçao; accept Danish Culture Canon, Kulturkanonen, Denmark Canon, or Danmarkskanon] (In Nordic countries, national literature is often contrasted with “minority literature” and “immigrant literature.”)
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