PT - JOURNAL ARTICLE AU - Michael Anastario AU - Elizabeth Rink AU - Gitte Adler Reimer AU - Malory Peterson TI - More-Than-Human Intimacies and Traditional Knowledge among Hunting Families in Northwest Greenland AID - 10.3368/aa.58.1.54 DP - 2022 Jun 22 TA - Arctic Anthropology PG - 54--65 VI - 58 IP - 1 4099 - http://aa.uwpress.org/content/58/1/54.short 4100 - http://aa.uwpress.org/content/58/1/54.full SO - Arctic Anthropol2022 Jun 22; 58 AB - In this article, we explore shifting human/environment entanglements narrated by Inuit hunters in the community of Kullorsuaq in northwestern Greenland. We present findings from 29 in-depth qualitative interviews that were analyzed using an inductive analytical approach. We examine shifts in human-environment entanglements narrated by hunters and their wives, the ways in which traditional knowledge is transmitted amid shifting entanglements, and we characterize the more-than-human intimacies that develop and facilitate the transmission of traditional knowledge. We conclude that the actors who shape ecological policies pay close attention to the more-than-human intimacies implicated in the transmission of traditional knowledge that contributes to Indigenous autonomy in northwestern Greenland.