Placing Identity: Town, Land, and Authenticity in Nunavut, Canada

Recent demographic changes have made settlement patterns in the Canadian Arctic increasingly urban. Iqaluit, capital of Canada’s newest territory, Nunavut, is home to the largest concentration of Inuit and non-Inuit populations in the Canadian North. Despite these trends, Inuit cultural identity c...

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Main Author: Searles, Edmund
Format: Text
Language:unknown
Published: Bucknell Digital Commons 2010
Subjects:
Online Access:https://digitalcommons.bucknell.edu/fac_journ/83
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spelling ftbucknelluniv:oai:digitalcommons.bucknell.edu:fac_journ-1071 2024-09-15T17:57:05+00:00 Placing Identity: Town, Land, and Authenticity in Nunavut, Canada Searles, Edmund 2010-11-01T07:00:00Z application/pdf https://digitalcommons.bucknell.edu/fac_journ/83 unknown Bucknell Digital Commons https://digitalcommons.bucknell.edu/fac_journ/83 Faculty Journal Articles Inuit Canada ethnicity place Anthropology text 2010 ftbucknelluniv 2024-07-30T03:08:06Z Recent demographic changes have made settlement patterns in the Canadian Arctic increasingly urban. Iqaluit, capital of Canada’s newest territory, Nunavut, is home to the largest concentration of Inuit and non-Inuit populations in the Canadian North. Despite these trends, Inuit cultural identity continues to rest heavily on the perception that to learn how to be authentically Inuit (or to be a better person), a person needs to spend time out on the land (and sea) hunting, fishing, trapping, and camping. Many Inuit also maintain a rather negative view of urban spaces in the Arctic, identifying them as places where Inuit values and practices have been eclipsed by Qallunaat (‘‘white people’’) ones. Some Inuit have even gone so far as to claim that a person is no longer able to be Inuit while living in towns like Iqaluit. This article examines those aspects of Canadian Inuit identity, culture, and tradition that disfavor the acceptance of an urban cultural identity. Based on ethnographic research conducted on Baffin Island in the mid 1990s and early 2000s, the many ways Iqaluit and outpost camp Inuit express the differences and similarities between living on the land and living in town are described. Then follows an examination of how the contrast of land and town is used in the rhetoric of Inuit politicians and leaders. Finally, a series of counterexamples are presented that favor the creation of an authentic urban Inuit identity in the Arctic, including recent attempts on the part of the Nunavut Territorial Government to make education and wage employment in the region more reliant on Inuit Qaujimajatuqangit, or Inuit traditional knowledge.1 Text Baffin Island Baffin inuit Iqaluit Nunavut Bucknell University: Bucknell Digital Commons
institution Open Polar
collection Bucknell University: Bucknell Digital Commons
op_collection_id ftbucknelluniv
language unknown
topic Inuit
Canada
ethnicity
place
Anthropology
spellingShingle Inuit
Canada
ethnicity
place
Anthropology
Searles, Edmund
Placing Identity: Town, Land, and Authenticity in Nunavut, Canada
topic_facet Inuit
Canada
ethnicity
place
Anthropology
description Recent demographic changes have made settlement patterns in the Canadian Arctic increasingly urban. Iqaluit, capital of Canada’s newest territory, Nunavut, is home to the largest concentration of Inuit and non-Inuit populations in the Canadian North. Despite these trends, Inuit cultural identity continues to rest heavily on the perception that to learn how to be authentically Inuit (or to be a better person), a person needs to spend time out on the land (and sea) hunting, fishing, trapping, and camping. Many Inuit also maintain a rather negative view of urban spaces in the Arctic, identifying them as places where Inuit values and practices have been eclipsed by Qallunaat (‘‘white people’’) ones. Some Inuit have even gone so far as to claim that a person is no longer able to be Inuit while living in towns like Iqaluit. This article examines those aspects of Canadian Inuit identity, culture, and tradition that disfavor the acceptance of an urban cultural identity. Based on ethnographic research conducted on Baffin Island in the mid 1990s and early 2000s, the many ways Iqaluit and outpost camp Inuit express the differences and similarities between living on the land and living in town are described. Then follows an examination of how the contrast of land and town is used in the rhetoric of Inuit politicians and leaders. Finally, a series of counterexamples are presented that favor the creation of an authentic urban Inuit identity in the Arctic, including recent attempts on the part of the Nunavut Territorial Government to make education and wage employment in the region more reliant on Inuit Qaujimajatuqangit, or Inuit traditional knowledge.1
format Text
author Searles, Edmund
author_facet Searles, Edmund
author_sort Searles, Edmund
title Placing Identity: Town, Land, and Authenticity in Nunavut, Canada
title_short Placing Identity: Town, Land, and Authenticity in Nunavut, Canada
title_full Placing Identity: Town, Land, and Authenticity in Nunavut, Canada
title_fullStr Placing Identity: Town, Land, and Authenticity in Nunavut, Canada
title_full_unstemmed Placing Identity: Town, Land, and Authenticity in Nunavut, Canada
title_sort placing identity: town, land, and authenticity in nunavut, canada
publisher Bucknell Digital Commons
publishDate 2010
url https://digitalcommons.bucknell.edu/fac_journ/83
genre Baffin Island
Baffin
inuit
Iqaluit
Nunavut
genre_facet Baffin Island
Baffin
inuit
Iqaluit
Nunavut
op_source Faculty Journal Articles
op_relation https://digitalcommons.bucknell.edu/fac_journ/83
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