university of nebraska press circumpolar lives and livelihood a comparative ethnoarchaeology of gender and subsistence mar 2006

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university of nebraska press circumpolar lives and livelihood a comparative ethnoarchaeology of gender and subsistence mar 2006

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[...]... Cheryl, and Rosemary A Joyce, eds 1997 Women in Prehistory: North America and Mesoamerica Philadelphia: University of Pennsylvania Press Clark, A McFadyen 1996 Who Lived in This House? Mercury Series, Archaeological Survey of Canada Paper, 153 Hull qc: Canadian Museum of Civilization Clark, A McFadyen, and Donald W Clark 1974 Koyukon Athapaskan Houses as Seen Through Oral Tradition and Through Archaeology... Tahltan Ethnoarchaeology Department of Archaeology Publication, 15 Burnaby bc: Simon Fraser University Arnold, Bettina, and Nancy L Wicker, eds 2001 Gender and the Archaeology of Death Walnut Creek ca: AltaMira Press Binford, Lewis R 1978 Nunamiut Ethnoarchaeology New York: Academic Press 1980 Willow Smoke and Dogs’ Tails: Hunter–Gatherer Settlement Systems and Archaeological Site Formation American Antiquity... Island, Alaska In Chapter 9 her task differentiation analysis focuses upon Iñupiaq plant gathering and bird hunting In the concluding chapter Brumbach and Jarvenpa compare the variable patterns of women’s and men’s work and amplify the archaeological implications of gender and subsistence suggested in the analyses of all four societies A model or gradient of gender ecology” is proposed that links alternatives... Ethnographic Research: Upper Churchill River Drainage, Saskatchewan, Canada Arctic 32:355–365 1980 The Trappers of Patuanak: Toward a Spatial Ecology of Modern Hunters National Museum of Man Mercury Series, Canadian Ethnology Service Paper, 67 Ottawa: National Museums of Canada 198 2a Intergroup Behavior and Imagery: The Case of Chipewyan and Cree Ethnology 21:283– 299 1982b Symbolism and Inter-Ethnic Relations... cultural anthropologists paid more systematic attention to technology and material culture Heeding Conklin’s wisdom, we have always conceived of our approach to ethnoarchaeology as a three-way dialogue between a cultural anthropologist (Jarvenpa), an archaeologist (Brumbach), and our Native collaborators regarding the material consequences and meanings of their behavior (Brumbach and Jarvenpa 1990)... subarctic Canada combines the use of direct historical analogies and a concern with site formation processes (Jarvenpa and Brumbach 1988, 1995; Brumbach and Jarvenpa 1989, 199 7a) More recently, Clark (1996) has elaborated upon her earlier analyses, attempting to reconcile patterning in artifactual and archaeofaunal residues with Koyukon informant testimony regarding household seating arrangements and activity... colleagues Albert Aubichon, Cecile Aubichon, Margaret Aubichon, Albert Black, Mary Black, Rose Campbell, Mary Djonaire, Bernadette George, Christine George, the late John John, Mary Jane John, Christine Lariviere, Mathias Maurice, J B McIntyre, and the late Agnes Roy of Patuanak and Knee Lake, Saskatchewan Their testimony and everyday lives revealed unexpected intricacies and flexibility in women’s and men’s... additional work during the fall and early winter of that year She had significant prior research experience in Khanty communities of the Trom’Agan River drainage and is an expert on political economic change, religion, and Christianization Organization of the Volume The subsequent chapters of this book are arranged to guide the reader step by step through the case materials and analyses of subsistence and gender. .. approach to ethnoarchaeology has grown and evolved over the past 25 years, it is part of the general field of inquiry recognized by Stiles as embracing “all the theoretical and methodological aspects of comparing ethnographic and archaeological data” (1977:88) This broad paradigm includes not only varying uses of ethnographic analogy but also the strategies of “living archaeology” (Gould 1980) or “archaeological... Table 1.1 Four-way Circumpolar comparison Group Language Family Biogeographic Zone Anthropologists Chipewyan Athapaskan Robert Jarvenpa Hetty Jo Brumbach Khanty Finno–Ugric S´ mi a Finno–Ugric I˜ upiaq n Eskimo–Aleut Central Canada subarctic, full boreal forest Western Siberia, subarctic taiga–bog Northwestern Finland, arctic alpine fjeld–forest Bering Strait, arctic insular marine Elena Glavatskaya . the abundant rhetorical assertions and epistemological arguments about androcentric bias in 4 jarvenpa and brumbach BOB — University of Nebraska Press / Page 5 / / Circumpolar Lives / Jarvenpa and. 296 10.2. Subsistence variables and gendered landscapes in four Circumpolar societies 312 x maps BOB — University of Nebraska Press / Page xi / / Circumpolar Lives / Jarvenpa and Brumbach 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 25 26 27 28 29 30 31 32 33 34 35 36 37 [First. ethnoarchaeological approaches to gender and subsistence in northern Canada. We are especially grateful for the patient guidance and insights of our Chipewyan friends and colleagues Albert Aubichon,

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  • Contents

  • Illustrations

  • Maps

  • Tables

  • Acknowledgments

  • 1. Introduction: Gender, Subsistence, and Ethnoarchaeology

  • 2. Chipewyan Society and Gender Relations

  • 3. Chipewyan Hunters

  • 4. Khanty Society and Gender Relations

  • 5. Khanty Hunter–Fisher–Herders

  • 6. Sámi Society and Gender Relations

  • 7. Sámi Reindeer Herders

  • 8. Iñupiaq Society and Gender Relations

  • 9. Iñupiaq Maritime Hunters

  • 10. Conclusion: Toward a Comparative Ethnoarchaeology of Gender

  • Notes on Contributors

  • Index

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