Gyáahlangee X̱íinangaas: Co-creating links between Haida Language Acquisition and Stories Told on the Land

In this paper we explore how we can work with legacy recordings of Haida gyáahlang.ee (clan stories) to create positive attitudes towards Xaad kil, and a sense of respect and awe for the deeds of ancestors by re-telling these stories on Haida ancestral lands to participating children, youth and elde...

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Main Authors: Ignace, Marianne, Bell, Lawrence, Finney, Kelli
Format: Audio
Language:unknown
Published: 2017
Subjects:
Kil
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/10125/41939
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spelling ftunivhawaiimano:oai:scholarspace.manoa.hawaii.edu:10125/41939 2023-05-15T16:32:32+02:00 Gyáahlangee X̱íinangaas: Co-creating links between Haida Language Acquisition and Stories Told on the Land Ignace, Marianne Bell, Lawrence Finney, Kelli Ignace, Marianne Bell, Lawrence Finney, Kelli 2017-03-02 audio/mpeg http://hdl.handle.net/10125/41939 unknown http://hdl.handle.net/10125/41939 Sound 2017 ftunivhawaiimano 2022-07-17T13:29:48Z In this paper we explore how we can work with legacy recordings of Haida gyáahlang.ee (clan stories) to create positive attitudes towards Xaad kil, and a sense of respect and awe for the deeds of ancestors by re-telling these stories on Haida ancestral lands to participating children, youth and elders. During the 1980s, two of the presenters recorded Haida clan stories of ancestors’ adventures on the land and sea surrounding Haida Gwaii with elders who spoke elaborate Haida, often integrating song into storytelling. As we found out, while on the one hand these are stories pertaining to particular matri-clans, the transmission of these stories was by no means confined to members of the protagonists’ or storytellers’ clans, but involved much more intricate patterns of young children and adults, at an impressionable age hearing these stories and then doing the story-work of remembering, occasionally retelling, and eventually recording them with the authors. Since then, as a team we have transcribed, glossed and translated these gyáahlang.ee, training Haida learners and graduate students in the process. In doing this work, we have discovered interesting and intriguing story plots, and through additional work that uncovered some 650 northern Haida toponyms, we have connected stories in minute detail to specific locations, thus retracing the steps of ancestors. In addition, we have uncovered previously undescribed or poorly understood features of Haida discourse, in particular aspects of verb morphology and features like topic tracking morphology, of which we will show examples. Having finished the anthropological and linguistic work on these stories, the co-authors then shared them with Haida children, youth and adults during on the land language camps on the west coast of Haida Gwaii. Bringing stories alive by re-creating the lived experience of the link to places (in Haida: “he went to the halibut bank just over on that point,” “those killerwhales were fed water from this little creek here, and they beached over ... Audio haida ScholarSpace at University of Hawaii at Manoa Kil ENVELOPE(11.836,11.836,65.017,65.017)
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description In this paper we explore how we can work with legacy recordings of Haida gyáahlang.ee (clan stories) to create positive attitudes towards Xaad kil, and a sense of respect and awe for the deeds of ancestors by re-telling these stories on Haida ancestral lands to participating children, youth and elders. During the 1980s, two of the presenters recorded Haida clan stories of ancestors’ adventures on the land and sea surrounding Haida Gwaii with elders who spoke elaborate Haida, often integrating song into storytelling. As we found out, while on the one hand these are stories pertaining to particular matri-clans, the transmission of these stories was by no means confined to members of the protagonists’ or storytellers’ clans, but involved much more intricate patterns of young children and adults, at an impressionable age hearing these stories and then doing the story-work of remembering, occasionally retelling, and eventually recording them with the authors. Since then, as a team we have transcribed, glossed and translated these gyáahlang.ee, training Haida learners and graduate students in the process. In doing this work, we have discovered interesting and intriguing story plots, and through additional work that uncovered some 650 northern Haida toponyms, we have connected stories in minute detail to specific locations, thus retracing the steps of ancestors. In addition, we have uncovered previously undescribed or poorly understood features of Haida discourse, in particular aspects of verb morphology and features like topic tracking morphology, of which we will show examples. Having finished the anthropological and linguistic work on these stories, the co-authors then shared them with Haida children, youth and adults during on the land language camps on the west coast of Haida Gwaii. Bringing stories alive by re-creating the lived experience of the link to places (in Haida: “he went to the halibut bank just over on that point,” “those killerwhales were fed water from this little creek here, and they beached over ...
author2 Ignace, Marianne
Bell, Lawrence
Finney, Kelli
format Audio
author Ignace, Marianne
Bell, Lawrence
Finney, Kelli
spellingShingle Ignace, Marianne
Bell, Lawrence
Finney, Kelli
Gyáahlangee X̱íinangaas: Co-creating links between Haida Language Acquisition and Stories Told on the Land
author_facet Ignace, Marianne
Bell, Lawrence
Finney, Kelli
author_sort Ignace, Marianne
title Gyáahlangee X̱íinangaas: Co-creating links between Haida Language Acquisition and Stories Told on the Land
title_short Gyáahlangee X̱íinangaas: Co-creating links between Haida Language Acquisition and Stories Told on the Land
title_full Gyáahlangee X̱íinangaas: Co-creating links between Haida Language Acquisition and Stories Told on the Land
title_fullStr Gyáahlangee X̱íinangaas: Co-creating links between Haida Language Acquisition and Stories Told on the Land
title_full_unstemmed Gyáahlangee X̱íinangaas: Co-creating links between Haida Language Acquisition and Stories Told on the Land
title_sort gyáahlangee x̱íinangaas: co-creating links between haida language acquisition and stories told on the land
publishDate 2017
url http://hdl.handle.net/10125/41939
long_lat ENVELOPE(11.836,11.836,65.017,65.017)
geographic Kil
geographic_facet Kil
genre haida
genre_facet haida
op_relation http://hdl.handle.net/10125/41939
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