Renewing relationships at the centre: generating a postcolonial understanding of Asiniskow Ithiniwak (Rocky Cree) heritage

For the Asiniskow Ithiniwak (Rocky Cree), the Missinipi (Churchill River) holds many traditional resource areas and cultural landscapes with oral histories that transfer knowledge through the generations (Linklater 1994; Castel and Westfall 2001; Brightman 1993). In recent decades, hydroelectric dev...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Sitchon, Myra
Other Authors: Hoppa, Robert (Anthropology), Syms, E. Leigh (Anthropology) Ladner, Kiera (Political Studies) Yellowhorn, Eldon (Department of Archaeology, Simon Fraser University)
Language:unknown
Published: 2013
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/1993/22081
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spelling ftcanadathes:oai:collectionscanada.gc.ca:MWU.1993/22081 2023-05-15T15:55:07+02:00 Renewing relationships at the centre: generating a postcolonial understanding of Asiniskow Ithiniwak (Rocky Cree) heritage Sitchon, Myra Hoppa, Robert (Anthropology) Syms, E. Leigh (Anthropology) Ladner, Kiera (Political Studies) Yellowhorn, Eldon (Department of Archaeology, Simon Fraser University) 2013-08-22T19:39:41Z http://hdl.handle.net/1993/22081 unknown http://hdl.handle.net/1993/22081 Rocky Cree heritage Indigenous heritage Aboriginal heritage Manitoba archaeology 2013 ftcanadathes 2014-06-28T23:46:19Z For the Asiniskow Ithiniwak (Rocky Cree), the Missinipi (Churchill River) holds many traditional resource areas and cultural landscapes with oral histories that transfer knowledge through the generations (Linklater 1994; Castel and Westfall 2001; Brightman 1993). In recent decades, hydroelectric development in north central Manitoba has impacted Cree livelihood by altering resource use, limiting access to significant cultural landscapes and accelerating the erosion of campsites and ancestral burials into the water. Even with existing provincial heritage legislation, some of these heritage resources remain threatened by land-based developments because of the limitations related to their identification, documentation and presentation in the cultural resource management field. The tendency to focus on physical manifestations of heritage such as archaeological sites, heritage objects and built heritage overlooks other resources of heritage such as places known in the local language. I argue that these biases result from cultural divergences that exist in the understanding and definitions of heritage, particularly Indigenous heritage. In this dissertation, I articulate how underlying theoretical assumptions of reality influences our understandings of heritage. I present a postcolonial understanding of heritage as interpreted from the perspective of the Asiniskow Ithiniwak using an Indigenous research paradigm, methodologies and the nīhithow language, in conjunction with knowledge based on Western intellectual traditions. The use of a bicultural research model led to new ways in identifying heritage resources important to the Asiniskow Ithiniwak and meaningful interpretations of archaeological materials based on legal traditions. Further, this case study demonstrates that there is no singular or universal definition of heritage for Indigenous peoples. For successful heritage resources protection, I illustrate that understandings of heritage need to be contextualized locally through a community’s language, culture, customary laws and local landscape. This view, promoted by UNESCO, emphasizes that the values and practices of local communities, together with traditional management systems, must be fully understood, respected, encouraged and accommodated in management plans if their heritage resources are to be sustained in the future (Logan 2008; UNESCO 2004). This outcome demonstrates the need to reexamine the practices, policies, legislation and procedures concerned with Indigenous knowledge in cultural and natural resources management in Canada. Other/Unknown Material Churchill Churchill River Theses Canada/Thèses Canada (Library and Archives Canada) Canada
institution Open Polar
collection Theses Canada/Thèses Canada (Library and Archives Canada)
op_collection_id ftcanadathes
language unknown
topic Rocky Cree heritage
Indigenous heritage
Aboriginal heritage
Manitoba archaeology
spellingShingle Rocky Cree heritage
Indigenous heritage
Aboriginal heritage
Manitoba archaeology
Sitchon, Myra
Renewing relationships at the centre: generating a postcolonial understanding of Asiniskow Ithiniwak (Rocky Cree) heritage
topic_facet Rocky Cree heritage
Indigenous heritage
Aboriginal heritage
Manitoba archaeology
description For the Asiniskow Ithiniwak (Rocky Cree), the Missinipi (Churchill River) holds many traditional resource areas and cultural landscapes with oral histories that transfer knowledge through the generations (Linklater 1994; Castel and Westfall 2001; Brightman 1993). In recent decades, hydroelectric development in north central Manitoba has impacted Cree livelihood by altering resource use, limiting access to significant cultural landscapes and accelerating the erosion of campsites and ancestral burials into the water. Even with existing provincial heritage legislation, some of these heritage resources remain threatened by land-based developments because of the limitations related to their identification, documentation and presentation in the cultural resource management field. The tendency to focus on physical manifestations of heritage such as archaeological sites, heritage objects and built heritage overlooks other resources of heritage such as places known in the local language. I argue that these biases result from cultural divergences that exist in the understanding and definitions of heritage, particularly Indigenous heritage. In this dissertation, I articulate how underlying theoretical assumptions of reality influences our understandings of heritage. I present a postcolonial understanding of heritage as interpreted from the perspective of the Asiniskow Ithiniwak using an Indigenous research paradigm, methodologies and the nīhithow language, in conjunction with knowledge based on Western intellectual traditions. The use of a bicultural research model led to new ways in identifying heritage resources important to the Asiniskow Ithiniwak and meaningful interpretations of archaeological materials based on legal traditions. Further, this case study demonstrates that there is no singular or universal definition of heritage for Indigenous peoples. For successful heritage resources protection, I illustrate that understandings of heritage need to be contextualized locally through a community’s language, culture, customary laws and local landscape. This view, promoted by UNESCO, emphasizes that the values and practices of local communities, together with traditional management systems, must be fully understood, respected, encouraged and accommodated in management plans if their heritage resources are to be sustained in the future (Logan 2008; UNESCO 2004). This outcome demonstrates the need to reexamine the practices, policies, legislation and procedures concerned with Indigenous knowledge in cultural and natural resources management in Canada.
author2 Hoppa, Robert (Anthropology)
Syms, E. Leigh (Anthropology) Ladner, Kiera (Political Studies) Yellowhorn, Eldon (Department of Archaeology, Simon Fraser University)
author Sitchon, Myra
author_facet Sitchon, Myra
author_sort Sitchon, Myra
title Renewing relationships at the centre: generating a postcolonial understanding of Asiniskow Ithiniwak (Rocky Cree) heritage
title_short Renewing relationships at the centre: generating a postcolonial understanding of Asiniskow Ithiniwak (Rocky Cree) heritage
title_full Renewing relationships at the centre: generating a postcolonial understanding of Asiniskow Ithiniwak (Rocky Cree) heritage
title_fullStr Renewing relationships at the centre: generating a postcolonial understanding of Asiniskow Ithiniwak (Rocky Cree) heritage
title_full_unstemmed Renewing relationships at the centre: generating a postcolonial understanding of Asiniskow Ithiniwak (Rocky Cree) heritage
title_sort renewing relationships at the centre: generating a postcolonial understanding of asiniskow ithiniwak (rocky cree) heritage
publishDate 2013
url http://hdl.handle.net/1993/22081
geographic Canada
geographic_facet Canada
genre Churchill
Churchill River
genre_facet Churchill
Churchill River
op_relation http://hdl.handle.net/1993/22081
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