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  1. Chiloé : an offshore song culture.Waldo Garrido & Philip Hayward - 2011 - In Godfrey Baldacchino (ed.), Island Songs: A Global Repertoire. Scarecrow Press.
     
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  2. Chiloé : an offshore song culture.Waldo Garrido & Philip Hayward - 2011 - In Godfrey Baldacchino (ed.), Island songs: a global repertoire. Scarecrow Press.
     
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    Mer-Hagography: The Erasure, Return and Resonance of Splash’s Older Mermaid.Philip Hayward - 2021 - Text Matters - a Journal of Literature, Theory and Culture 11:139-156.
    The 1984 feature film Splash initially included a scene featuring an embittered, older mermaid that was deleted before the final version premiered. Since that excision, the older mermaid and the scene she appeared in have been recreated by fans and the mer/sea-hag has come to comprise a minor element in contemporary online culture. The term “Merhag,” in particular, has also spread beyond the film, being taken up in fantasy fiction and being used—allusively and often pejoratively—to describe notional and actual female (...)
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    Chiloé island, located in Chile, between 41 and 43 degrees south and 73 degrees west, is the second largest island on the Pacific coast of South America (after the sparsely inhabited Tierra del Fuego at the southern tip of the continent). Census figures from 2002 identified the population of the island and its smaller outliers as close to 155,000, representing approximately. [REVIEW]Waldo Garrido & Philip Hayward - 2011 - In Godfrey Baldacchino (ed.), Island Songs: A Global Repertoire. Scarecrow Press. pp. 153.
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