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A Yupiaq Worldview: A Pathway to Ecology and Spirit

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The Alaska Native Reader
This chapter is in the book The Alaska Native Reader
A Yupiaq Worldview: A Pathway to ecology and s[Duke University Press does not hold electronic rights to this material. To view it, please refer to the print version of this title.]
© 2020 Duke University Press, Durham, USA

A Yupiaq Worldview: A Pathway to ecology and s[Duke University Press does not hold electronic rights to this material. To view it, please refer to the print version of this title.]
© 2020 Duke University Press, Durham, USA

Chapters in this book

  1. Frontmatter i
  2. Contents vii
  3. List of Illustrations xi
  4. Preface xiii
  5. Acknowledgments xxi
  6. Alaska and Its People: An Introduction 1
  7. I Portraits of Nations: Telling Our Own Story
  8. Lazeni ’linn Nataełde Ghadghaande: When Russians Were Killed at “Roasted Salmon Place” (Batzulnetas) 15
  9. The Fur Rush: A Chronicle of Colonial Life 28
  10. Redefining Our Planning Traditions: Caribou Fences, Community, and the Neetsaii Experience 42
  11. Memories of My Trap Line 49
  12. Cultural Identity through Yupiaq Narrative 56
  13. Dena’ina Ełnena: Dena’ina Country: The Dena’ina in Anchorage, Alaska 67
  14. Qaneryaramta Egmiucia: Continuing Our Language 85
  15. Deg Xinag Oral Traditions: Reconnecting Indigenous Language and Education through Traditional Narratives 91
  16. The Alaskan Haida Language Today: Reasons for Hope 106
  17. II Empire: Processing Colonization
  18. Yuuyaraq: The Way of the Human Being 121
  19. Angoon Remembers: The Religious Significance of Balance and Reciprocity 144
  20. The Comity Agreement: Missionization of Alaska Native People 151
  21. Dena’ina Heritage and Representation in Anchorage: A Collaborative Project 163
  22. How It Feels to Have Your History Stolen 176
  23. Undermining Our Tribal Governments: The Stripping of Land, Resources, and Rights from Alaska Native Nations 178
  24. Terra Incognita: Communities and Resource Wars 184
  25. Why the Natives of Alaska Have a Land Claim 192
  26. A Brief History of Native Solidarity 202
  27. III Worldviews: Alaska Native and Indigenous Epistemologies
  28. A Yupiaq Worldview: A Pathway to Ecology and Spirit 221
  29. The Cosmos: Indigenous Perspectives 230
  30. Seeing Mathematics with Indian Eyes 237
  31. What Is Truth? Where Western Science and Traditional Knowledge Converge 246
  32. The Yup’ik and Cup’ik People 252
  33. IV Native Arts: A Weaving of Melody and Color
  34. Ugiuvangmiut Illugiit Atuut: Teasing Cousins Songs of the King Island Iñupiat 261
  35. fly by night mythology: An Indigenous Guide to White Man, or How to Stay Sane When the World Makes No Sense 272
  36. Kodiak Masks: A Personal Odyssey 283
  37. Artifacts in Sound: A Century of Field Recordings of Alaska Natives 294
  38. Digital Media as a Means of Self Discovery: Identity Affirmations in Modern Technology 306
  39. America’s Wretched 309
  40. The Alaska Native Arts Festival 318
  41. Conflict and Counter-Myth in the Film Smoke Signals 321
  42. Alaska Native Literature: An Updated Introduction 333
  43. V Ravenstales
  44. Poems 339
  45. Poem 351
  46. Living in the Arctic 352
  47. Tunnel? . . . What Tunnel? 356
  48. Daisy’s Best-Ever Moose Stew 360
  49. Suggestions for Further Reading 363
  50. Acknowledgment of Copyrights 381
  51. Index 385
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