Nunakun-gguq Ciutengqertut/They Say They Have Ears Through the Ground

Nunakun-gguq Ciutengqertut/They Say They Have Ears Through the Ground

Author: Ann Fienup-Riordan

Publisher: University of Alaska Press

Published: 2020-07-15

Total Pages: 481

ISBN-13: 1602234124

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Lifeways in Southwest Alaska today remains inextricably bound to the seasonal cycles of sea and land. Community members continue to hunt, fish, and make products from the life found in the rivers and sea. Based on a wealth of oral histories collected over decades of research, this book explores the ancestral relationship between Yup’ik people and the natural world of Southwest Alaska. Nunakun-gguq Ciutengqertut studies the overlapping lives of the Yup’ik with native plants, animals, and birds, and traces how these relationships transform as more Yup’ik people relocate to urban areas and with the changing environment. The book is presented in bilingual format, with facing-page translations, and will be hailed as a milestone work in the anthropological study of contemporary Alaska.


Where the Echo Began

Where the Echo Began

Author: Hans Himmelheber

Publisher:

Published: 2000

Total Pages: 270

ISBN-13:

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In this book, the Native people of southwest Alaska generously share the traditional stories that form the expressive core of their unique culture. The lifeways observed and anecdotes recounted to a then-young university graduate, who recorded and compiled them in communities on Nunivak Island and the Yukon-Kuskokwim Delta, offer a glimpse today of a longstanding way of life. In the mid-1930s, Hans Himmelheber closely observed the Yup'ik and Cup'ig people who offered him hospitality, paying heed to their stories and anecdotes; he photographed them just as carefully, capturing their activities with technical elegance while simultaneously preserving unstudied moments in the people's lives. Himmelheber's photographs also honor his informants, for as one of them told him regarding his people's artwork, "you know every picture has a meaning." The majority of these photographs have not been published before. This book includes the translated contents of Himmelheber's The Frozen Path: Myths, Tales, and Legends of the Eskimos; "Ethnographic Notes on the Nunivak Eskimos"; "Noseblood as Adhesive Material for Color Paint among the Eskimos"; and "Unimaginable Miracles in the Poetry of Western Africa and the Eskimos," originally released in German. Kurt and Ester Vitt's translation is readable and clear. Editor Ann Fienup-Riordan, herself a distinguished ethnographer known for her work in southwest Alaska, provides annotation and a detailed discussion of Himmelheber's role as observer and recorder in a thoughtful, scholarly introduction. Though much has changed in the last half century, Yup'ik and Cup'ig orators continue to tell stories to educate and amuse their listeners. With this English translation, Himmelheber has passed on what he learned to Native and non-Native readers alike.


Telling Our Selves

Telling Our Selves

Author: Chase Hensel

Publisher: Oxford University Press

Published: 1996-11-28

Total Pages: 233

ISBN-13: 0195344677

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In this book, Chase Hensel examines how Yup'ik Eskimos and non-natives construct and maintain gender and ethnic identities through strategic talk about hunting, fishing, and processing. Although ethnicity is overtly constructed in terms of either/or categories, the discourse of Bethel residents suggests that their actual concern is less with whether one is native or non-native, than with how native one is in a given context. In the interweaving of subsistence practices and subsistence discourse, ethnicity is constantly recreated.


Guide to the Birds of Southwest Alaska

Guide to the Birds of Southwest Alaska

Author: Ethel Joanne Nelson

Publisher:

Published: 2012

Total Pages: 0

ISBN-13: 9780741478009

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This is not just a guide to the many species of birds of Southwestern Alaska, but to their preferred habitat, courting displays, nest construction and location, number of eggs, incubation, fledging, food preferences, migration patterns, and many little-known habits of various birds. It gives details on special characteristics that make identification easier such as manner of walking, flying and feeding. It tells what seasons of the year an individual species is most apt to be seen and whether that species is common or uncommon and whether or not it is a known breeder in Southwestern Alaska.


A Tale of Three Villages

A Tale of Three Villages

Author: Liam Frink

Publisher: University of Arizona Press

Published: 2016-04-07

Total Pages: 184

ISBN-13: 0816531099

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"The book is an investigation of culture change among the Yup'ik Eskimo people of the southwestern Alaskan coast from the time of European/Russian contact through the mid-twentieth century"--Provided by publisher.