“I Was Grown up Before I Was Born”: Wisdom in Kangiryarmuit Life Stories
This essay draws from a collaborative (SSHRC funded) research project between a Canadian Inuit community and a literacy organization that followed life histories of Inuit (Kangiryarmuit) Elders that were digitally recorded, and translated into English, as a key source of data about traditional Inuit...
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Format: | Article in Journal/Newspaper |
Language: | English |
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The International Association for the Advancement of Curriculum Studies (IAACS)
2011
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Online Access: | http://ojs.library.ubc.ca/index.php/tci/article/view/2040 https://doi.org/10.14288/tci.v7i2.2040 |
Summary: | This essay draws from a collaborative (SSHRC funded) research project between a Canadian Inuit community and a literacy organization that followed life histories of Inuit (Kangiryarmuit) Elders that were digitally recorded, and translated into English, as a key source of data about traditional Inuit literacies (Balanoff & Chambers, 2005). Analysis of life history transcripts revealed that within life stories are “clues” (Ingold, 2000) to knowledge sought; that telling stories, including one’s own, is a social activity (Cruikshank, 1998) where meaning is not fixed but generated within the context, in this case, an “interview” of an Elder by Inuit researchers. The life histories, as recorded and transcribed, map out an interconnected world of places, people, and other-than human beings, and activities and experiences within that world. |
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