Wild Unicorn Herd

A POC/non-white/mixie nerd scrapbook. Because we’re awesome.

#am i doing it right?

Leave a number in my askbox and I’ll tell you

  1. How I think The Gaslight Dogs and The Fifth Head of Cerberus use indigenous shapeshifters to address “going native” from a postcolonial perspective
  2. How I think The Gaslight Dogs and The Fifth Head of Cerberus use indigenous shapeshifters to address “going native” from a postcolonial perspective
  3. How I think The Gaslight Dogs and The Fifth Head of Cerberus use indigenous shapeshifters to address “going native” from a postcolonial perspective
  4. How I think The Gaslight Dogs and The Fifth Head of Cerberus use indigenous shapeshifters to address “going native” from a postcolonial perspective
  5. How I think The Gaslight Dogs and The Fifth Head of Cerberus use indigenous shapeshifters to address “going native” from a postcolonial perspective
  6. How I think The Gaslight Dogs and The Fifth Head of Cerberus use indigenous shapeshifters to address “going native” from a postcolonial perspective
  7. How I think The Gaslight Dogs and The Fifth Head of Cerberus use indigenous shapeshifters to address “going native” from a postcolonial perspective
  8. How I think The Gaslight Dogs and The Fifth Head of Cerberus use indigenous shapeshifters to address “going native” from a postcolonial perspective
  9. How I think The Gaslight Dogs and The Fifth Head of Cerberus use indigenous shapeshifters to address “going native” from a postcolonial perspective
  10. How I think The Gaslight Dogs and The Fifth Head of Cerberus use indigenous shapeshifters to address “going native” from a postcolonial perspective
  11. How I think The Gaslight Dogs and The Fifth Head of Cerberus use indigenous shapeshifters to address “going native” from a postcolonial perspective
  12. How I think The Gaslight Dogs and The Fifth Head of Cerberus use indigenous shapeshifters to address “going native” from a postcolonial perspective