May 16 (UPI) --Chanel has been criticized for appropriating Indigenous Australian culture by selling a more than $1,000 boomerang. The $1,325 black wood and resin boomerang is part of the "other ...
Chanel is selling a $1,325 version of the indigenous hunting tool online. — -- Chanel's latest addition to its high-fashion sports equipment line is drawing accusations of cultural appropriation.
Chanel on Tuesday responded to a controversy about producing a high-priced boomerang featuring the brand’s signature logo after some people criticized it as an appropriation of Australian Aboriginal ...
There’s something almost magical about the way boomerangs arc through the air and return to the hand of the thrower. Watching them cut through the sky on their wide trajectories can provide endless ...
A new study into the multipurpose uses of boomerangs has highlighted the hardwood objects were used to shape the edges of stone tools used by Australian Indigenous communities. The research ...
New research has analysed a rare collection of non-returning boomerangs from Kinipapa (Cooper Creek), near Innamincka in South Australia’s far north-east. The four boomerangs and one wooden fragment ...
New research has analyzed a rare collection of non-returning boomerangs from Kinipapa (Cooper Creek), near Innamincka in South Australia's far north-east. The four boomerangs and one wooden fragment ...