Ka Isinakwak Askiy : using Cree knowledge to perceive and describe the landscape of the Wapusk National Park Area

The Cree of northern Manitoba possess extensive knowledge and expertise about the land on which they have lived through many generations. In collaboration with community elders, this study aims at presenting the landscape of Wapusk through the eyes of the Cree. These are the areas of York Factory, t...

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Main Author: M'Lot, Maria
Language:English
Published: 2009
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/1993/3777
id ftcanadathes:oai:collectionscanada.gc.ca:MWU.1993/3777
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institution Open Polar
collection Theses Canada/Thèses Canada (Library and Archives Canada)
op_collection_id ftcanadathes
language English
description The Cree of northern Manitoba possess extensive knowledge and expertise about the land on which they have lived through many generations. In collaboration with community elders, this study aims at presenting the landscape of Wapusk through the eyes of the Cree. These are the areas of York Factory, the Nelson River, the Churchill River and Wapusk National Park. Through their use and occupancy of the area, the Cree have come to understand the landscape, which is evident in their naming of landscape features and places. Their knowledge provides a different descriptive "map" of the area. Through the building of relationships characterized by trust, respect and reciprocity, knowledge can be shared and learned. With the consent of the Cree people from Churchill, York Factory First Nation and Fox Lake First Nation, a variety of techniques were used to gather and document information, namely semi-structured interviews, participant observation, mapping and photographs. These techniques were used for both the naming of places and the naming of landscape features. Collaboration involved individuals and groups, and involved both male and female collaborators. Along the western shore of the Hudson Bay, people attributed names to waterways, rivers and creeks, points of land, island and camp areas. More detailed names were obtained around York Factory depicting the intensive use of the area for hundreds of years. The Cree names were different from the English names and were associated with seasonal activities, physical description of the land, or the presence of certain animal species. A map of Cree place names provides a different presentation of the land area, each place name carrying rich and descriptive information. The descriptive detail of each landscape term was captured as the Cree terms were translated into English, thus making it possible to examine how the Cree view the land. Cree naming of the various landscape features seems to be based on descriptions of physical appearance, habitat, activities or human uses. Physical descriptions are used by the Cree to establish working landscape terms that provide practical and descriptive information about the appearance of the land. Some landscape terms are habitat descriptions that name various species according to the environment in which they live. In some instances, the landscape terminology developed and used by the Cree displays a link to certain land use activities and different human uses of the land. Although the Cree have no term for 'ecosystem', they do express the concept when they talk about landscape or land. All aspects of land are present in the knowledge of the Cree when they speak about landscape, including landscape structures, flows across the landscape and key functions and processes. Cree landscape terminology can provide understanding on how the Cree view and describe the land. The richness of Cree knowledge has been illustrated only in part through this documentation of local place names and Cree landscape terms. Although this is just one area covered by Cree knowledge, the knowledge is rich and provides information on a wide range of topics. The knowledge of the people needs to be learned by devoting time and showing a great deal of respect for the culture and to those who hold the knowledge. At the same time, it is important to compile this specialized terminology since some knowledge of naming is slowly being lost.
author M'Lot, Maria
spellingShingle M'Lot, Maria
Ka Isinakwak Askiy : using Cree knowledge to perceive and describe the landscape of the Wapusk National Park Area
author_facet M'Lot, Maria
author_sort M'Lot, Maria
title Ka Isinakwak Askiy : using Cree knowledge to perceive and describe the landscape of the Wapusk National Park Area
title_short Ka Isinakwak Askiy : using Cree knowledge to perceive and describe the landscape of the Wapusk National Park Area
title_full Ka Isinakwak Askiy : using Cree knowledge to perceive and describe the landscape of the Wapusk National Park Area
title_fullStr Ka Isinakwak Askiy : using Cree knowledge to perceive and describe the landscape of the Wapusk National Park Area
title_full_unstemmed Ka Isinakwak Askiy : using Cree knowledge to perceive and describe the landscape of the Wapusk National Park Area
title_sort ka isinakwak askiy : using cree knowledge to perceive and describe the landscape of the wapusk national park area
publishDate 2009
url http://hdl.handle.net/1993/3777
long_lat ENVELOPE(-94.803,-94.803,56.000,56.000)
ENVELOPE(-92.306,-92.306,57.002,57.002)
geographic Fox Lake
Hudson
Hudson Bay
York Factory
geographic_facet Fox Lake
Hudson
Hudson Bay
York Factory
genre Churchill
Churchill River
Hudson Bay
Nelson River
Wapusk national park
genre_facet Churchill
Churchill River
Hudson Bay
Nelson River
Wapusk national park
op_relation http://hdl.handle.net/1993/3777
op_rights The reproduction of this thesis has been made available by authority of the copyright owner solely for the purpose of private study and research, and may only be reproduced and copied as permitted by copyright laws or with express written authorization from the copyright owner.
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spelling ftcanadathes:oai:collectionscanada.gc.ca:MWU.1993/3777 2023-05-15T15:55:08+02:00 Ka Isinakwak Askiy : using Cree knowledge to perceive and describe the landscape of the Wapusk National Park Area M'Lot, Maria 2009-12-08T18:58:52Z http://hdl.handle.net/1993/3777 en_US eng http://hdl.handle.net/1993/3777 The reproduction of this thesis has been made available by authority of the copyright owner solely for the purpose of private study and research, and may only be reproduced and copied as permitted by copyright laws or with express written authorization from the copyright owner. 2009 ftcanadathes 2014-03-30T00:50:28Z The Cree of northern Manitoba possess extensive knowledge and expertise about the land on which they have lived through many generations. In collaboration with community elders, this study aims at presenting the landscape of Wapusk through the eyes of the Cree. These are the areas of York Factory, the Nelson River, the Churchill River and Wapusk National Park. Through their use and occupancy of the area, the Cree have come to understand the landscape, which is evident in their naming of landscape features and places. Their knowledge provides a different descriptive "map" of the area. Through the building of relationships characterized by trust, respect and reciprocity, knowledge can be shared and learned. With the consent of the Cree people from Churchill, York Factory First Nation and Fox Lake First Nation, a variety of techniques were used to gather and document information, namely semi-structured interviews, participant observation, mapping and photographs. These techniques were used for both the naming of places and the naming of landscape features. Collaboration involved individuals and groups, and involved both male and female collaborators. Along the western shore of the Hudson Bay, people attributed names to waterways, rivers and creeks, points of land, island and camp areas. More detailed names were obtained around York Factory depicting the intensive use of the area for hundreds of years. The Cree names were different from the English names and were associated with seasonal activities, physical description of the land, or the presence of certain animal species. A map of Cree place names provides a different presentation of the land area, each place name carrying rich and descriptive information. The descriptive detail of each landscape term was captured as the Cree terms were translated into English, thus making it possible to examine how the Cree view the land. Cree naming of the various landscape features seems to be based on descriptions of physical appearance, habitat, activities or human uses. Physical descriptions are used by the Cree to establish working landscape terms that provide practical and descriptive information about the appearance of the land. Some landscape terms are habitat descriptions that name various species according to the environment in which they live. In some instances, the landscape terminology developed and used by the Cree displays a link to certain land use activities and different human uses of the land. Although the Cree have no term for 'ecosystem', they do express the concept when they talk about landscape or land. All aspects of land are present in the knowledge of the Cree when they speak about landscape, including landscape structures, flows across the landscape and key functions and processes. Cree landscape terminology can provide understanding on how the Cree view and describe the land. The richness of Cree knowledge has been illustrated only in part through this documentation of local place names and Cree landscape terms. Although this is just one area covered by Cree knowledge, the knowledge is rich and provides information on a wide range of topics. The knowledge of the people needs to be learned by devoting time and showing a great deal of respect for the culture and to those who hold the knowledge. At the same time, it is important to compile this specialized terminology since some knowledge of naming is slowly being lost. Other/Unknown Material Churchill Churchill River Hudson Bay Nelson River Wapusk national park Theses Canada/Thèses Canada (Library and Archives Canada) Fox Lake ENVELOPE(-94.803,-94.803,56.000,56.000) Hudson Hudson Bay York Factory ENVELOPE(-92.306,-92.306,57.002,57.002)