Building birch bark canoes: oral histories, colonial archives, and stories of survivance

Colonial archival practices have promoted the absence of Indigenous knowledge as part of broader attempts at cultural assimilation and erasure. 20th century anthropology’s ‘salvage ethnographies’ reduced cultures to their material objects, largely muting the complex social and linguistic forms to wh...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Chapman, Christopher
Format: Thesis
Language:unknown
Published: 2018
Subjects:
Online Access:http://summit.sfu.ca/item/18545
id ftsimonfu:oai:summit.sfu.ca:18545
record_format openpolar
spelling ftsimonfu:oai:summit.sfu.ca:18545 2023-05-15T13:28:30+02:00 Building birch bark canoes: oral histories, colonial archives, and stories of survivance Chapman, Christopher 2018-07-13 http://summit.sfu.ca/item/18545 unknown etd19757 http://summit.sfu.ca/item/18545 Thesis 2018 ftsimonfu 2022-04-07T18:41:57Z Colonial archival practices have promoted the absence of Indigenous knowledge as part of broader attempts at cultural assimilation and erasure. 20th century anthropology’s ‘salvage ethnographies’ reduced cultures to their material objects, largely muting the complex social and linguistic forms to which those objects belong. I examine one such object, the birch bark canoe, in two related archives: documentary films produced predominantly by the National Film Board of Canada between the 1920s and 70s; and the canoe researches of American artist, journalist and ethnographer E. Tappan Adney (1868-1950). Archival agendas and conventions give way to what Anishinaabe writer Gerald Vizenor has named practices of survivance, aesthetic expressions which challenge “isolated and stoical” portraits of Indigeneity. Canoe building, a practice that invariably belongs to scenes of everyday life – to people in particular places, and to local languages – enlivens each archives with “motion, presence, and survivance”, telling stories of cultural resilience and humanity. Thesis anishina* Summit - SFU Research Repository (Simon Fraser University) Canada
institution Open Polar
collection Summit - SFU Research Repository (Simon Fraser University)
op_collection_id ftsimonfu
language unknown
description Colonial archival practices have promoted the absence of Indigenous knowledge as part of broader attempts at cultural assimilation and erasure. 20th century anthropology’s ‘salvage ethnographies’ reduced cultures to their material objects, largely muting the complex social and linguistic forms to which those objects belong. I examine one such object, the birch bark canoe, in two related archives: documentary films produced predominantly by the National Film Board of Canada between the 1920s and 70s; and the canoe researches of American artist, journalist and ethnographer E. Tappan Adney (1868-1950). Archival agendas and conventions give way to what Anishinaabe writer Gerald Vizenor has named practices of survivance, aesthetic expressions which challenge “isolated and stoical” portraits of Indigeneity. Canoe building, a practice that invariably belongs to scenes of everyday life – to people in particular places, and to local languages – enlivens each archives with “motion, presence, and survivance”, telling stories of cultural resilience and humanity.
format Thesis
author Chapman, Christopher
spellingShingle Chapman, Christopher
Building birch bark canoes: oral histories, colonial archives, and stories of survivance
author_facet Chapman, Christopher
author_sort Chapman, Christopher
title Building birch bark canoes: oral histories, colonial archives, and stories of survivance
title_short Building birch bark canoes: oral histories, colonial archives, and stories of survivance
title_full Building birch bark canoes: oral histories, colonial archives, and stories of survivance
title_fullStr Building birch bark canoes: oral histories, colonial archives, and stories of survivance
title_full_unstemmed Building birch bark canoes: oral histories, colonial archives, and stories of survivance
title_sort building birch bark canoes: oral histories, colonial archives, and stories of survivance
publishDate 2018
url http://summit.sfu.ca/item/18545
geographic Canada
geographic_facet Canada
genre anishina*
genre_facet anishina*
op_relation etd19757
http://summit.sfu.ca/item/18545
_version_ 1766404504166596608