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Akulmiut Neqait: Fish and Food of the Akulmiut [Minkštas viršelis]

  • Formatas: Paperback / softback, 350 pages, aukštis x plotis: 254x178 mm
  • Išleidimo metai: 15-Aug-2019
  • Leidėjas: University of Alaska Press
  • ISBN-10: 1602233861
  • ISBN-13: 9781602233867
Kitos knygos pagal šią temą:
  • Formatas: Paperback / softback, 350 pages, aukštis x plotis: 254x178 mm
  • Išleidimo metai: 15-Aug-2019
  • Leidėjas: University of Alaska Press
  • ISBN-10: 1602233861
  • ISBN-13: 9781602233867
Kitos knygos pagal šią temą:
For centuries, the Akulmiut people—a Yup’ik group—have been sustained by the annual movements of whitefish. It is a food that sustains and defines them. To this day, many Akulmiut view not only their actions in the world, but their interactions with each other, as having a direct and profound effect on these fish. Not only are fish viewed as responding to human action and intention in many contexts, but the lakes and rivers fish inhabit are likewise viewed as sentient beings, with the ability to respond both positively and negatively to those who travel there.
This bilingual book details the lives of the Akulmiut living in the lake country west of Bethel, Alaska, in the villages of Kasigluk, Nunapitchuk, and Atmautluak. Akulmiut Neqait is based in conversations recorded with the people of these villages as they talk about their uniquely Yup'ik view of the world and how it has weathered periods of immense change in southwest Alaska. While many predicted that globalization would sound the death knoll for many distinctive traditions, these conversations show that Indigenous people all over the planet have sought to appropriate the world in their own terms. For all their new connectedness, the continued relevance of traditional admonitions cannot be denied.
 
Illustrations
ix
Acknowledgments xi
Introduction
Understanding "Whitefish"
1(3)
The Akulmiut Region and Seasonal Round
4(7)
Kasigluk Gathering
11(6)
Food and Family
17(10)
Fish Throughout the Year
Nanvarpak Lake
27(8)
Landlocked Akakiiget
35(1)
The Time When Nanvarpak Dies
36(5)
Akakiiget Rearing Grounds
41(2)
Fish Fences and Large Fish Traps
43(7)
Fish Migrations Upriver
50(2)
Fish Out-migration during Fall and Spring
52(3)
Fish Migrations along Petmigtalek River
55(3)
What Fish Eat
58(1)
Blackfish
58(5)
Pike
63(2)
Knowing the Land and Wilderness
Hunting and Fishing Areas
65(2)
Travel Routes and Portages
67(4)
Place Names
71(1)
Fall and Winter Fur Trapping
72(6)
Muskrat Hunting in Spring
78(3)
Care of Fish and Food
Taking Care of Fish and Food
81(1)
Women's Lives
82(2)
Women's Ways of Processing Fish
84(11)
Care of Bones and Fish Scraps
95(2)
All Things Have Awareness
Abstinence Practices
97(3)
Those Abstaining Following Their
100(3)
Other-Than-Human Persons
103(3)
Its Conclusion
106(1)
Our World and Weather Are
Weather Indicators
106(4)
Environmental Change
110(5)
Beavers
115(3)
Food Shortage
118(4)
Youth Need to Hear Admonishments
122(2)
Hunting and Fishing Regulations Today
124(2)
Conclusion
126(5)
Yup'ik Transcription and Translation
131(7)
THINGS WE TALKED ABOUT
Food and Family: Men's Lives
138(18)
Personal Stories
156(48)
Fish Throughout the Year
Nanvarpak Lake
204(22)
Large Fish Traps and Fish Fences
226(12)
Fish Migrations
238(18)
Blackfish
256(14)
Hunting and Fur Trapping
270(30)
Food Shortage
300(8)
Taking Care of Fish and Food
Women's Lives
308(10)
Women's Ways of Processing Fish
318(6)
Broad Whitefis
324(28)
Humpback Whitefish
352(2)
Pike
354(6)
Blackfish
360(4)
Sheefish and Burbot
364(6)
Kuskokwim River Fish
370(1)
A Festive Mixture
370(4)
Foods That Have Adverse Effects
374(2)
Care of Bones and Fish Scraps
376(8)
All Things Have Awareness
Abstinence Rules
384(18)
Other-Than-Human Persons
402(16)
Its Conclusion
418(7)
Notes 425(4)
Fish Names 429(5)
References 434(3)
Index 437
Ann Fienup-Riordan has lived and worked in Alaska since 1973. She has written and edited more than twenty books on Yup'ik history and oral traditions. Her most recent book with the University of Alaska Press is Qanemcit Amllertut/Many Stories to Tell: Tales of Humans and Animals from Southwest Alaska. Marie Meade is a fluent Yup'ik speaker and an expert translator. She teaches Yup'ik at the University of Alaska Anchorage. Alice Rearden is a fluent Yup'ik speaker, and the primary translator and oral historian for the Alaska Council for Exceptional Children.