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Storytelling in the Fourth World : explorations in meaning of place and Tla'amin resistance to dispossessionPatrick, Lyana Marie. 10 April 2008 (has links)
This thesis examines the impacts of indigenous dispossession from lands and resources by utilizing a concept in ecology, that of ecological keystone species, and extending it to species that play a key, characterizing role in a particular culture or society. A storytelling methodology is used to determine the presence of cultural keystones in stories and place names of Tla'amin peoples, a Northern Coast Salish group whose traditional territory is located along the coast 130 kilometres northwest of Vancouver, British Columbia. I extend the storytelling methodology to encompass film and video projects that exhibit characteristics of Fourth World Cinema and discuss how such films can be used to empower indigenous communities and reclaim cultural and political rights.
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Coast Salish household and community organizations at Sx̲wóx̲wiymelh an ancient Stó:lō village in the Upper Fraser Valley, British Columbia /Lenert, Michael Peter, January 2007 (has links)
Thesis (Ph. D)--UCLA, 2007. / Vita. Includes bibliographical references (leaves 291-325).
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Coast Salish children's narratives : structural analysis from three perspectivesBrighouse, Jean Alison January 1990 (has links)
Narratives serve many functions within a given cultural group. As well as reflecting and transmitting the social values of that group, narratives provide children with a cognitive framework that is an important factor in the learning process. Although the structure of narratives has been described for mainstream children, there is some debate as to whether different cultures share the same narrative structure. A culturally-based difference in narrative structure may contribute to the fact that Native Indian children (as well as children from other minority cultures) are overrepresented among those children who have difficulty in school.
The present study set out to investigate whether there was a discernable difference in the structure of narratives told by five Coast Salish children aged 5;0 -8;6 and those told by mainstream children reported in the narrative development research literature. Two types of narratives (personal experience and fictional) were collected and analyzed according to three analysis procedures: high point analysis, which emphasizes evaluation of events; episodic analysis, which emphasizes goal-based action; and poetic analysis, which emphasizes the poetic form of the narratives.
The high point analysis revealed that the Coast Salish children ordered events in their stories in a different order than mainstream children do. Both the high point
and the episodic analyses showed that the Coast Salish children expressed relationships between events implicitly more frequently than mainstream children. The poetic analysis was the most revealing of potential intercultural differences. This analysis revealed that falling intonation, grammatic closure, lexical markers and shifts in perspective (reference, action, focused participant, time frame, comment, etc.) defined structural units in the narratives of the Coast Salish children. This evidence of structural unit markers was consistent with predictions based on research by Scollon & Scollon (1981, 1984). The results of this investigation have implications for educators and speech-language pathologists in their interaction with Native Indian children. In addition, the results provide a useful indication of the necessary considerations and appropriate procedures for carrying out a more focused study of the narratives of a larger group of Native Indian children. / Medicine, Faculty of / Audiology and Speech Sciences, School of / Graduate
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Identifying Sto:lo basketry : exploring different ways of knowing material cultureFortney, Sharon M. 05 1900 (has links)
Coast Salish coiled basketry has been a much-neglected area of research. Previous
investigations into this topic have been primarily concerned with geo-cultural
distributions, and discussions pertaining to stylistic attributes. In recent years several
scholars have turned their attention to the topic of Salish weavings, but they have focused
their efforts quite narrowly on textiles made from wool and other similar fibres to the
exclusion of weaving techniques such as basketry which utilise local roots and barks.
This thesis will focus exclusively on one type of Salish basketry - coiled basketry.
In this thesis I explore different ways of identifying, or "knowing", Coast Salish
coiled cedar root basketry. I specifically focus on Sto:lo basketry and identify three ways
in which Sto:lo basket makers "know" these objects. First I discuss the Halkomelem
terminology and what insights it provides to indigenous classification systems. Secondly,
I situate coiled basketry in a broader Coast Salish weaving complex in order to discuss
how basketry is influenced by other textile arts. This also enables me to explore how
Sto:lo weavers identify a well-made object. In the final section I discuss ownership of
designs by individuals and their families.
This research draws primarily from interviews conducted with Sto:lo basket
makers between May and September 2000 in their communities and at the Museum of
Anthropology at UBC. It is supplemented by interviews with basket makers from other
Salish communities and by the ethnographic literature on this topic.
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Canada Customs, Each-you-eyh-ul Siem (?) : sights/sites of meaning in Musqueam weavingFairchild, Alexa Suzanne 11 1900 (has links)
This thesis focuses on the production and display of weavings made by a small
number of Musqueam women, who in the 1980s began weaving in the tradition of their
ancestors. It addresses the way in which these weavings, positioned throughout
Vancouver and worn in public settings, build a visual presence to counter the exclusion of
Coast Salish cultural representations from the public construction of history in Vancouver
and the discourse of Northwest Coast art. The Vancouver International Airport and the
Museum of Anthropology at the University o f British Columbia both share with
Musqueam a history of place. A distinct relationship fostered between Museum staff and
members of the Musqueam community has yielded several exhibits since the first, Hands
of Our Ancestors: The Revival of Weaving at Musqueam, opened in 1986. The presence
of Musqueam material at the Museum is part of an extensive history of interaction and
negotiation between Canadian museums and the cultural communities whose histories,
traditions and material culture are represented - a history which encompasses issues of
representation, authorship and authority. The Vancouver International Airport is also
situated on Musqueam traditional territory. Designed by representatives from the
Musqueam Cultural Committee and the Airport project team, the international arrivals
area features works of contemporary Musqueam artists which are intended to create a
sense of place with an emphasis on the distinctiveness of its location. Travelers cross
several thresholds in the terminal - the sequence o f these crossings carefully
choreographed so that deplaning passengers pass from the non-space of international
transience to a culturally specific space marked by Musqueam's cultural representations,
and then past Customs into Canada. Certain incidents at these sites indicate that visibility
and self-representation do not in themselves answer the problems of power and history.
When the Museum of Anthropology hosted a meeting for leaders of the Asia Pacific
Economic Community in 1997, a newly implemented protocol agreement between
Musqueam and the Museum was broken; and in a number of instances, achievements at
the Airport have also been impaired. Despite these limits, weavings are not examples of
token native inclusion as some critics argue. Rather, they are cultural representations
strategically deployed by the Musqueam community. Enlarged from traditional blankets
to monumental hangings, these weavings participate with other more recognized
monumental Northwest Coast forms. They are visual, public signifiers of Musqueam
identity which, without violating boundaries between public and private knowledge, carry
messages from the community to a broader audience - messages intended to mark
Musqueam's precedence in Vancouver's past as well as to claim visibility in the present.
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Alternative genders in the Coast Salish world : paradox and patternYoung, Jean C. 11 1900 (has links)
The concern of this thesis is the position of people of alternative genders in Coast Salish culture,
not only in the past, but in the present. How were individuals with such a difference treated? What forces
constrained them? What factors afforded them opportunity? Were such genders even recognized? With
these questions in mind, field work was conducted with the permission of the Std: Id Nation throughout the
summer of 1998. This paper is based on interviews conducted then and subsequent interviews with people
from other Coast Salish groups. In addition, local ethnographic materials—with reference to field notes
whenever possible—and traditional stories were analyzed from the perspective of Coast Salish
epistemology. Alternative genders need to be understood foremost in the cultural contexts in which they
occur, only then can comparisons proceed from a secure foundation.
Research revealed a paradoxical situation. Oral traditions in which the alternately gendered are
despised, occur side-by-side with traditions in which such people were honoured for the special powers
they possessed. Individuals and families operated in the space generated by this paradox, playing the
"serious games" to which Ortner alludes (1996:12-13). The absence of a "master narrative" in Coast
Salish culture accounts for some, but not all of these contradictions. Equally relevant are persistent
patterns of secrecy, personal autonomy, kin solidarity, differential status, and differential gender flexibility
that both restrict the social field and offer stress points that were, and are, manipulated in individual and
collective strategies. Given a world view in which transformation was the norm, and in which the
disadvantaged could become powerful overnight by revealing the power they had hidden, some
alternatively gendered people were able to maximize their potential and become significant forces. No
formal roles offered sanction, instead an ad hoc approach marked the response to alternative genders and
the outcome rested on the position of the individual and her/his family, and their ability to maneuver
within multiple constraints. It was this potential to transform a stigmatized status into an honoured role
that made the position of the alternatively gendered paradoxical.
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Coast Salish senses of place : dwelling, meaning, power, property and territory in the Coast Salish worldThom, Brian David January 2005 (has links)
This study addresses the question of the nature of indigenous people's connection to the land, and the implications of this for articulating these connections in legal arenas where questions of Aboriginal title and land claims are at issue. The idea of 'place' is developed, based in a phenomenology of dwelling which takes profound attachments to home places as shaping and being shaped by ontological orientation and social organization. In this theory of the 'senses of place', the author emphasizes the relationships between meaning and power experienced and embodied in place, and the social systems of property and territory that forms indigenous land tenure systems. To explore this theoretical notion of senses of place, the study develops a detailed ethnography of a Coast Salish Aboriginal community on southeast Vancouver Island, British Columbia, Canada. Through this ethnography of dwelling, the ways in which places become richly imbued with meanings and how they shape social organization and generate social action are examined. Narratives with Coast Salish community members, set in a broad context of discussing land claims, provide context for understanding senses of place imbued with ancestors, myth, spirit, power, language, history, property, territory and boundaries. The author concludes in arguing that by attending to a theorized understanding of highly local senses of place, nuanced conceptions of indigenous relationships to land which appreciate indigenous relations to land in their own terms can be articulated.
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Canada Customs, Each-you-eyh-ul Siem (?) : sights/sites of meaning in Musqueam weavingFairchild, Alexa Suzanne 11 1900 (has links)
This thesis focuses on the production and display of weavings made by a small
number of Musqueam women, who in the 1980s began weaving in the tradition of their
ancestors. It addresses the way in which these weavings, positioned throughout
Vancouver and worn in public settings, build a visual presence to counter the exclusion of
Coast Salish cultural representations from the public construction of history in Vancouver
and the discourse of Northwest Coast art. The Vancouver International Airport and the
Museum of Anthropology at the University o f British Columbia both share with
Musqueam a history of place. A distinct relationship fostered between Museum staff and
members of the Musqueam community has yielded several exhibits since the first, Hands
of Our Ancestors: The Revival of Weaving at Musqueam, opened in 1986. The presence
of Musqueam material at the Museum is part of an extensive history of interaction and
negotiation between Canadian museums and the cultural communities whose histories,
traditions and material culture are represented - a history which encompasses issues of
representation, authorship and authority. The Vancouver International Airport is also
situated on Musqueam traditional territory. Designed by representatives from the
Musqueam Cultural Committee and the Airport project team, the international arrivals
area features works of contemporary Musqueam artists which are intended to create a
sense of place with an emphasis on the distinctiveness of its location. Travelers cross
several thresholds in the terminal - the sequence o f these crossings carefully
choreographed so that deplaning passengers pass from the non-space of international
transience to a culturally specific space marked by Musqueam's cultural representations,
and then past Customs into Canada. Certain incidents at these sites indicate that visibility
and self-representation do not in themselves answer the problems of power and history.
When the Museum of Anthropology hosted a meeting for leaders of the Asia Pacific
Economic Community in 1997, a newly implemented protocol agreement between
Musqueam and the Museum was broken; and in a number of instances, achievements at
the Airport have also been impaired. Despite these limits, weavings are not examples of
token native inclusion as some critics argue. Rather, they are cultural representations
strategically deployed by the Musqueam community. Enlarged from traditional blankets
to monumental hangings, these weavings participate with other more recognized
monumental Northwest Coast forms. They are visual, public signifiers of Musqueam
identity which, without violating boundaries between public and private knowledge, carry
messages from the community to a broader audience - messages intended to mark
Musqueam's precedence in Vancouver's past as well as to claim visibility in the present. / Arts, Faculty of / Art History, Visual Art and Theory, Department of / Graduate
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Alternative genders in the Coast Salish world : paradox and patternYoung, Jean C. 11 1900 (has links)
The concern of this thesis is the position of people of alternative genders in Coast Salish culture,
not only in the past, but in the present. How were individuals with such a difference treated? What forces
constrained them? What factors afforded them opportunity? Were such genders even recognized? With
these questions in mind, field work was conducted with the permission of the Std: Id Nation throughout the
summer of 1998. This paper is based on interviews conducted then and subsequent interviews with people
from other Coast Salish groups. In addition, local ethnographic materials—with reference to field notes
whenever possible—and traditional stories were analyzed from the perspective of Coast Salish
epistemology. Alternative genders need to be understood foremost in the cultural contexts in which they
occur, only then can comparisons proceed from a secure foundation.
Research revealed a paradoxical situation. Oral traditions in which the alternately gendered are
despised, occur side-by-side with traditions in which such people were honoured for the special powers
they possessed. Individuals and families operated in the space generated by this paradox, playing the
"serious games" to which Ortner alludes (1996:12-13). The absence of a "master narrative" in Coast
Salish culture accounts for some, but not all of these contradictions. Equally relevant are persistent
patterns of secrecy, personal autonomy, kin solidarity, differential status, and differential gender flexibility
that both restrict the social field and offer stress points that were, and are, manipulated in individual and
collective strategies. Given a world view in which transformation was the norm, and in which the
disadvantaged could become powerful overnight by revealing the power they had hidden, some
alternatively gendered people were able to maximize their potential and become significant forces. No
formal roles offered sanction, instead an ad hoc approach marked the response to alternative genders and
the outcome rested on the position of the individual and her/his family, and their ability to maneuver
within multiple constraints. It was this potential to transform a stigmatized status into an honoured role
that made the position of the alternatively gendered paradoxical. / Arts, Faculty of / Anthropology, Department of / Graduate
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Identifying Sto:lo basketry : exploring different ways of knowing material cultureFortney, Sharon M. 05 1900 (has links)
Coast Salish coiled basketry has been a much-neglected area of research. Previous
investigations into this topic have been primarily concerned with geo-cultural
distributions, and discussions pertaining to stylistic attributes. In recent years several
scholars have turned their attention to the topic of Salish weavings, but they have focused
their efforts quite narrowly on textiles made from wool and other similar fibres to the
exclusion of weaving techniques such as basketry which utilise local roots and barks.
This thesis will focus exclusively on one type of Salish basketry - coiled basketry.
In this thesis I explore different ways of identifying, or "knowing", Coast Salish
coiled cedar root basketry. I specifically focus on Sto:lo basketry and identify three ways
in which Sto:lo basket makers "know" these objects. First I discuss the Halkomelem
terminology and what insights it provides to indigenous classification systems. Secondly,
I situate coiled basketry in a broader Coast Salish weaving complex in order to discuss
how basketry is influenced by other textile arts. This also enables me to explore how
Sto:lo weavers identify a well-made object. In the final section I discuss ownership of
designs by individuals and their families.
This research draws primarily from interviews conducted with Sto:lo basket
makers between May and September 2000 in their communities and at the Museum of
Anthropology at UBC. It is supplemented by interviews with basket makers from other
Salish communities and by the ethnographic literature on this topic. / Arts, Faculty of / Anthropology, Department of / Graduate
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