Zobrazeno 1 - 10
of 37
pro vyhledávání: '"K. L. Pratt"'
Autor:
I. Krupnik, K. L. Pratt
Publikováno v:
Arctic Anthropology. 49:94-112
The Unalakleet River was an important center of human economic activity in western Alaska from precontact times through at least the early 1900s. Its rich cultural history developed through the actions of a diverse cast of players, including Yup'ik E
Publikováno v:
Arctic Anthropology. 49:113-127
Apart from the important ethnographic descriptions of Kaj Birket-Smith (1953) and Frederica de Laguna (1956), only vague statements of the socio-territorial dynamics in the Chugach region of Alaska, Prince William Sound, are found in the literature.
Publikováno v:
Arctic Anthropology. 49:1-4
Publikováno v:
Arctic Anthropology. 49:58-71
Inspired by ethnographic analogies and interpretations of late Dorset symbolic representations an attempt is made to understand the material evidence concerning spiritual worlds and cosmology of the earliest human societies of the eastern Arctic, des
Publikováno v:
Arctic Anthropology. 49:227-235
Ernest S. "Tiger" Burch, Jr., was a prolifi c author during his 50-year career. The Ar- chives and Polar Regions Collections, University of Alaska Fairbanks now houses his research papers, fi les, correspondence, and fi eld notes. The Ernest S. Burch
Publikováno v:
Arctic Anthropology. 49:128-142
Ernest Burch, Jr. served as the expert on National Geographic magazine's 1983 Peoples of the Arctic supplemental map. Using material from his personal collection and the National Geographic Society archives, Burch's contribution to the Saami portion
Publikováno v:
Arctic Anthropology. 49:190-195
Between 1986 and 1995 I collaborated with Tiger Burch on an ethnohistorical topic very close to both of us. The resulting extended essay on the Di’hąįį Gwich’in was published in 1995 under a title of his creation. I have revisited our correspo
Publikováno v:
Arctic Anthropology. 49:196-200
Here I describe four decades of my collaboration with Ernest S. "Tiger" Burch, Jr., principally concerning the editing of three late 19th-century reports on the Inupiat of northwest- ern Alaska, reports which were compiled at a time when Inupiaq soci
Publikováno v:
Arctic Anthropology. 49:72-93
Ernest S. Burch reconstructed the political economy and demography of the Inupiat of Northwest Alaska ca. A.D. 1800 based on extensive interviews in the 1960s-1980s with Native historians, archival records, and historical accounts. Although Burch emp
Publikováno v:
Arctic Anthropology. 49:41-57
In 1971, Ernest S. Burch identified "nonempirical phenomena" as variables in travel and settlement decision-making among Inupiaq Eskimo of Northwest Alaska. This article parses the term "nonempirical" and advocates the use of Hallowell's (1960) term