Law on the Land: Contesting Ethical Authority in the Western Arctic

This article addresses the relationship between the Vuntut Gwitchin and the Canadian state during the early twentieth century. Although this was a moment of increasing contact with nonindigenous people, the Gwitchin refer to this period in their oral histories as being particularly harmonious, even...

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Published in:Ethnohistory
Main Author: Demuth, Bathsheba
Format: Article in Journal/Newspaper
Language:English
Published: Duke University Press 2013
Subjects:
Online Access:http://dx.doi.org/10.1215/00141801-2140740
https://read.dukeupress.edu/ethnohistory/article-pdf/60/3/469/410881/EH603_09Demuth_Fpp.pdf
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spelling crdukeunivpr:10.1215/00141801-2140740 2024-06-02T08:02:17+00:00 Law on the Land: Contesting Ethical Authority in the Western Arctic Demuth, Bathsheba 2013 http://dx.doi.org/10.1215/00141801-2140740 https://read.dukeupress.edu/ethnohistory/article-pdf/60/3/469/410881/EH603_09Demuth_Fpp.pdf en eng Duke University Press Ethnohistory volume 60, issue 3, page 469-483 ISSN 0014-1801 1527-5477 journal-article 2013 crdukeunivpr https://doi.org/10.1215/00141801-2140740 2024-05-07T13:15:44Z This article addresses the relationship between the Vuntut Gwitchin and the Canadian state during the early twentieth century. Although this was a moment of increasing contact with nonindigenous people, the Gwitchin refer to this period in their oral histories as being particularly harmonious, even “the best time to be Gwitchin.” Accounts of daily life emphasize the selective incorporation of European goods in ways that meshed with traditional ethics. The article contrasts these stories with Gwitchin descriptions of the Alfred Johnson manhunt, an event that brought the Canadian state into Gwitchin space to hunt a fugitive. In the early twentieth century, such direct contact with Western legal norms was rare; oral histories describe this extension of the law into Gwitchin space as corrosive, capable of changing patterns of life and ethics. Unlike European trade goods, these technologies of rule were harder to participate in selectively. Thus this article argues that 1900–1940 was a unique period in Gwitchin history not because there was little contact with Euro-Canadians but rather because contact rarely involved disciplinary forms of power with the potential to make Gwitchin society subject to new legal norms and ideas. Article in Journal/Newspaper Arctic Gwitchin Duke University Press Arctic Ethnohistory 60 3 469 483
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language English
description This article addresses the relationship between the Vuntut Gwitchin and the Canadian state during the early twentieth century. Although this was a moment of increasing contact with nonindigenous people, the Gwitchin refer to this period in their oral histories as being particularly harmonious, even “the best time to be Gwitchin.” Accounts of daily life emphasize the selective incorporation of European goods in ways that meshed with traditional ethics. The article contrasts these stories with Gwitchin descriptions of the Alfred Johnson manhunt, an event that brought the Canadian state into Gwitchin space to hunt a fugitive. In the early twentieth century, such direct contact with Western legal norms was rare; oral histories describe this extension of the law into Gwitchin space as corrosive, capable of changing patterns of life and ethics. Unlike European trade goods, these technologies of rule were harder to participate in selectively. Thus this article argues that 1900–1940 was a unique period in Gwitchin history not because there was little contact with Euro-Canadians but rather because contact rarely involved disciplinary forms of power with the potential to make Gwitchin society subject to new legal norms and ideas.
format Article in Journal/Newspaper
author Demuth, Bathsheba
spellingShingle Demuth, Bathsheba
Law on the Land: Contesting Ethical Authority in the Western Arctic
author_facet Demuth, Bathsheba
author_sort Demuth, Bathsheba
title Law on the Land: Contesting Ethical Authority in the Western Arctic
title_short Law on the Land: Contesting Ethical Authority in the Western Arctic
title_full Law on the Land: Contesting Ethical Authority in the Western Arctic
title_fullStr Law on the Land: Contesting Ethical Authority in the Western Arctic
title_full_unstemmed Law on the Land: Contesting Ethical Authority in the Western Arctic
title_sort law on the land: contesting ethical authority in the western arctic
publisher Duke University Press
publishDate 2013
url http://dx.doi.org/10.1215/00141801-2140740
https://read.dukeupress.edu/ethnohistory/article-pdf/60/3/469/410881/EH603_09Demuth_Fpp.pdf
geographic Arctic
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genre Arctic
Gwitchin
genre_facet Arctic
Gwitchin
op_source Ethnohistory
volume 60, issue 3, page 469-483
ISSN 0014-1801 1527-5477
op_doi https://doi.org/10.1215/00141801-2140740
container_title Ethnohistory
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