Social flexibility and integration in a Canadian Inuit settlement : Lake Harbour, M.W.T.

The flexibility of Inuit social organization may be defined as a lack of societal preference among several different courses of action. Although the concept of flexibility has wide application to Inuit social organization this does not suggest that there is a complete lack of structure and order. So...

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Main Author: Lange, Phillip Allen
Format: Thesis
Language:English
Published: University of British Columbia 1972
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/2429/33568
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spelling ftunivbritcolcir:oai:circle.library.ubc.ca:2429/33568 2023-05-15T16:06:43+02:00 Social flexibility and integration in a Canadian Inuit settlement : Lake Harbour, M.W.T. 1970 Lange, Phillip Allen 1972 http://hdl.handle.net/2429/33568 eng eng University of British Columbia For non-commercial purposes only, such as research, private study and education. Additional conditions apply, see Terms of Use https://open.library.ubc.ca/terms_of_use. Eskimos -- Northwest Territories -- Lake Harbour Text Thesis/Dissertation 1972 ftunivbritcolcir 2019-10-15T18:03:19Z The flexibility of Inuit social organization may be defined as a lack of societal preference among several different courses of action. Although the concept of flexibility has wide application to Inuit social organization this does not suggest that there is a complete lack of structure and order. Some of the parameters of flexibility are described through behaviour which is either disapproved or required. Two theses are advanced. One is that flexibility allows creative action which is potentially adaptive and/or integrative. This point is developed by showing a variety of ways in which different Inuit men in Lake Harbour effectively utilize combinations of hunting, trapping, carving and wage-labour, each in a manner unique to himself. The other thesis is that Inuit society is integrated wholly through mutually consensual dyadic relationships. There are two ways in which the importance of these relationships are shown in Inuit life. One is lack of imposed authority; the other is the rich variety of ritual and other relationships which are either based or seen to be based on the consensus of the two participants for the initiation and content, of the relationship. Local group leadership shows this clearly as men recognize a man as leader only while he provides them benefits. The characterisitc attributes of leadership (age, skill in hunting, knowledge, position as head of a large kin group and ownership of a boat) do not result in leadership if a man is unable to provide resources to others. The importance of mutually consensual dyadic relationships is shown through descriptions of rejected children and orphans, who receive what Euro-Canadians consider to be trauma-inducing abuse and rejection, yet appear to develop helathy personalities through acceptance and nurturance on the part of peers and sympathetic adults. Because of the dyadic consensual nature of Inuit social organization, its integration relies critically on Inuit voluntarily establishing ties of dependence and support. Arts, Faculty of Sociology, Department of Graduate Thesis eskimo* inuit Northwest Territories University of British Columbia: cIRcle - UBC's Information Repository Lake Harbour ENVELOPE(-69.848,-69.848,62.834,62.834) Northwest Territories Territories Lake ENVELOPE(-106.601,-106.601,60.000,60.000)
institution Open Polar
collection University of British Columbia: cIRcle - UBC's Information Repository
op_collection_id ftunivbritcolcir
language English
topic Eskimos -- Northwest Territories -- Lake Harbour
spellingShingle Eskimos -- Northwest Territories -- Lake Harbour
Lange, Phillip Allen
Social flexibility and integration in a Canadian Inuit settlement : Lake Harbour, M.W.T.
topic_facet Eskimos -- Northwest Territories -- Lake Harbour
description The flexibility of Inuit social organization may be defined as a lack of societal preference among several different courses of action. Although the concept of flexibility has wide application to Inuit social organization this does not suggest that there is a complete lack of structure and order. Some of the parameters of flexibility are described through behaviour which is either disapproved or required. Two theses are advanced. One is that flexibility allows creative action which is potentially adaptive and/or integrative. This point is developed by showing a variety of ways in which different Inuit men in Lake Harbour effectively utilize combinations of hunting, trapping, carving and wage-labour, each in a manner unique to himself. The other thesis is that Inuit society is integrated wholly through mutually consensual dyadic relationships. There are two ways in which the importance of these relationships are shown in Inuit life. One is lack of imposed authority; the other is the rich variety of ritual and other relationships which are either based or seen to be based on the consensus of the two participants for the initiation and content, of the relationship. Local group leadership shows this clearly as men recognize a man as leader only while he provides them benefits. The characterisitc attributes of leadership (age, skill in hunting, knowledge, position as head of a large kin group and ownership of a boat) do not result in leadership if a man is unable to provide resources to others. The importance of mutually consensual dyadic relationships is shown through descriptions of rejected children and orphans, who receive what Euro-Canadians consider to be trauma-inducing abuse and rejection, yet appear to develop helathy personalities through acceptance and nurturance on the part of peers and sympathetic adults. Because of the dyadic consensual nature of Inuit social organization, its integration relies critically on Inuit voluntarily establishing ties of dependence and support. Arts, Faculty of Sociology, Department of Graduate
format Thesis
author Lange, Phillip Allen
author_facet Lange, Phillip Allen
author_sort Lange, Phillip Allen
title Social flexibility and integration in a Canadian Inuit settlement : Lake Harbour, M.W.T.
title_short Social flexibility and integration in a Canadian Inuit settlement : Lake Harbour, M.W.T.
title_full Social flexibility and integration in a Canadian Inuit settlement : Lake Harbour, M.W.T.
title_fullStr Social flexibility and integration in a Canadian Inuit settlement : Lake Harbour, M.W.T.
title_full_unstemmed Social flexibility and integration in a Canadian Inuit settlement : Lake Harbour, M.W.T.
title_sort social flexibility and integration in a canadian inuit settlement : lake harbour, m.w.t.
publisher University of British Columbia
publishDate 1972
url http://hdl.handle.net/2429/33568
long_lat ENVELOPE(-69.848,-69.848,62.834,62.834)
ENVELOPE(-106.601,-106.601,60.000,60.000)
geographic Lake Harbour
Northwest Territories
Territories Lake
geographic_facet Lake Harbour
Northwest Territories
Territories Lake
genre eskimo*
inuit
Northwest Territories
genre_facet eskimo*
inuit
Northwest Territories
op_rights For non-commercial purposes only, such as research, private study and education. Additional conditions apply, see Terms of Use https://open.library.ubc.ca/terms_of_use.
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