Features
- Cover Type: Paperback with 176 pages
- Published by: Waveland Pr Inc
- Edition: 2nd Edition February 15, 2006
- Written in: English
- ISBN 10 Number: 1577663845
- ISBN 13 Number: 978-1577663843
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Book Dimensions:
8.8 x 6 x 0.5 inches
- Weighs: 8 ounces
Product Description
Oscar Kawagley is a man of two worlds, walking the sometimes bewildering line between traditional Yupiaq culture and the Westernized Yupiaq life of today. In this study, Kawagley follows both memories of his Yupiaq grandmother, who raised him with the stories of the Bear lady and respectful knowledge of the reciprocity of nature, and his own education in science as it is taught in Western schools. Kawagley is a man who hears the elders voices in Alaska, knows how to look for the weather, and to use the land and its creatures with the most delicate care. In a call to unite the two parts of his own and modern Yupiaq history, Kawagley proposes a way of teaching that incorporates all ways of knowing available in Yupiaq and Western science. He has trav¬eled a long journey, but it ends where it began, in a fishing camp in southwestern Alaska, a home for his heart and spirit. The second edition looks at changes that have impacted the Yupiaq and other Alaska native communities over the last ten years, including implementation of cultural standards in indigenous education and the emergence of a holistic approach in the sciences.
Publisher Description
Titles of related interest from Waveland Press: Balikci, The Netsilik Eskimo (ISBN 9780881334357); Brody, Maps and Dreams: Indians and the British Columbia Frontier (ISBN 9780881339659); Jarvenpa, Northern Passage: Ethnography and Apprenticeship among the Subarctic Dene (ISBN 9780881339901); and Ziker, Peoples of the Tundra: Northern Siberians in the Post-Communist Transition (ISBN 9781577662129).