The Spatial Demography of the 'Outer Taiga' of the Zhuia River Valley, Eastern Siberia

A census is often associated with the accounting of people; however people always live in places - and place is usually a silent partner in demographic research. In this chapter we present our interim results of a project reconstructing the cultural landscape of what is today a remote resource extra...

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Main Authors: Anderson, David G., Ineshin, Evgenii M., Ziker, John P.
Format: Text
Language:unknown
Published: ScholarWorks 2011
Subjects:
Online Access:https://scholarworks.boisestate.edu/anthro_facpubs/48
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spelling ftboisestateu:oai:scholarworks.boisestate.edu:anthro_facpubs-1047 2023-10-29T02:36:10+01:00 The Spatial Demography of the 'Outer Taiga' of the Zhuia River Valley, Eastern Siberia Anderson, David G. Ineshin, Evgenii M. Ziker, John P. 2011-01-01T08:00:00Z https://scholarworks.boisestate.edu/anthro_facpubs/48 unknown ScholarWorks https://scholarworks.boisestate.edu/anthro_facpubs/48 Anthropology Faculty Publications and Presentations Anthropology text 2011 ftboisestateu 2023-09-29T15:07:24Z A census is often associated with the accounting of people; however people always live in places - and place is usually a silent partner in demographic research. In this chapter we present our interim results of a project reconstructing the cultural landscape of what is today a remote resource extraction outpost of Irkutsk oblast'. Our project used traditional ethnographic field research, ethnohistorical interpretation, and environmental archaeology to understand the intersecting environments of Evenki, Iakut, Russian Settler and Russian Industrial inhabitants. Here we focus upon the meaning of certain transitory spaces often described as 'encampments' [stoibishche] in official Soviet archival records but today are often called 'meadows' [poliana] or 'seasonal or overwintering cabins' [zimov'e] by local people. The Polar Census enumerator A. T. Samokhin wrote of the transitory spaces in his manuscripts with great energy and yet with great difficulty since they complicated the official distinction between 'nomadic' and 'sedentary' populations. Here we argue that a sufficient understanding of the interaction of people and place forces a broader understanding of the 'built environment' which includes meadows, trails and culturally modified trees as material signs of a flexible and autonomous hunting and herding culture. We propose that the material artefacts of what Samokhin described a 'chaotic' and 'semi-nomadic' [polukochevoe] existence can be better described as an adaptation focused upon the use of a 'river valley' [reka] as a territorial unit. Instead of concurring with older arguments that these 'not-yet' settled adaptations were signs of the half=completed pressures of cultural evolution and the incipient extinction of ancient nomadic forms, we argue that this semi-settled use of place if finely attuned to exploit the hunting and trade opportunities that mining and the fur-trade created. Our ethnographic work demonstrates that these adaptations are still viable today in the post-Soviet period. This chapter ... Text Evenki taiga Siberia Boise State University: Scholar Works
institution Open Polar
collection Boise State University: Scholar Works
op_collection_id ftboisestateu
language unknown
topic Anthropology
spellingShingle Anthropology
Anderson, David G.
Ineshin, Evgenii M.
Ziker, John P.
The Spatial Demography of the 'Outer Taiga' of the Zhuia River Valley, Eastern Siberia
topic_facet Anthropology
description A census is often associated with the accounting of people; however people always live in places - and place is usually a silent partner in demographic research. In this chapter we present our interim results of a project reconstructing the cultural landscape of what is today a remote resource extraction outpost of Irkutsk oblast'. Our project used traditional ethnographic field research, ethnohistorical interpretation, and environmental archaeology to understand the intersecting environments of Evenki, Iakut, Russian Settler and Russian Industrial inhabitants. Here we focus upon the meaning of certain transitory spaces often described as 'encampments' [stoibishche] in official Soviet archival records but today are often called 'meadows' [poliana] or 'seasonal or overwintering cabins' [zimov'e] by local people. The Polar Census enumerator A. T. Samokhin wrote of the transitory spaces in his manuscripts with great energy and yet with great difficulty since they complicated the official distinction between 'nomadic' and 'sedentary' populations. Here we argue that a sufficient understanding of the interaction of people and place forces a broader understanding of the 'built environment' which includes meadows, trails and culturally modified trees as material signs of a flexible and autonomous hunting and herding culture. We propose that the material artefacts of what Samokhin described a 'chaotic' and 'semi-nomadic' [polukochevoe] existence can be better described as an adaptation focused upon the use of a 'river valley' [reka] as a territorial unit. Instead of concurring with older arguments that these 'not-yet' settled adaptations were signs of the half=completed pressures of cultural evolution and the incipient extinction of ancient nomadic forms, we argue that this semi-settled use of place if finely attuned to exploit the hunting and trade opportunities that mining and the fur-trade created. Our ethnographic work demonstrates that these adaptations are still viable today in the post-Soviet period. This chapter ...
format Text
author Anderson, David G.
Ineshin, Evgenii M.
Ziker, John P.
author_facet Anderson, David G.
Ineshin, Evgenii M.
Ziker, John P.
author_sort Anderson, David G.
title The Spatial Demography of the 'Outer Taiga' of the Zhuia River Valley, Eastern Siberia
title_short The Spatial Demography of the 'Outer Taiga' of the Zhuia River Valley, Eastern Siberia
title_full The Spatial Demography of the 'Outer Taiga' of the Zhuia River Valley, Eastern Siberia
title_fullStr The Spatial Demography of the 'Outer Taiga' of the Zhuia River Valley, Eastern Siberia
title_full_unstemmed The Spatial Demography of the 'Outer Taiga' of the Zhuia River Valley, Eastern Siberia
title_sort spatial demography of the 'outer taiga' of the zhuia river valley, eastern siberia
publisher ScholarWorks
publishDate 2011
url https://scholarworks.boisestate.edu/anthro_facpubs/48
genre Evenki
taiga
Siberia
genre_facet Evenki
taiga
Siberia
op_source Anthropology Faculty Publications and Presentations
op_relation https://scholarworks.boisestate.edu/anthro_facpubs/48
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