Fishing At Karluk: Nature, Technology, and the Creation of the Karluk Reservation In Territorial Alaska

Fishing gear is indisputably central to the act of fishing, yet its importance to the history of commercial salmon fishing has been neglected. This thesis investigates the manifold ways that Native and white fishermen, canners, and federal bureaucrats utilized the beach seine and purse seine to cons...

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Main Author: Grantham, Anjuli Fair
Format: Text
Language:unknown
Published: Scholar Commons 2011
Subjects:
Online Access:https://scholarcommons.sc.edu/etd/1460
https://scholarcommons.sc.edu/cgi/viewcontent.cgi?article=2461&context=etd
id ftunivsouthcar:oai:scholarcommons.sc.edu:etd-2461
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spelling ftunivsouthcar:oai:scholarcommons.sc.edu:etd-2461 2023-05-15T13:21:21+02:00 Fishing At Karluk: Nature, Technology, and the Creation of the Karluk Reservation In Territorial Alaska Grantham, Anjuli Fair 2011-01-01T08:00:00Z application/pdf https://scholarcommons.sc.edu/etd/1460 https://scholarcommons.sc.edu/cgi/viewcontent.cgi?article=2461&context=etd unknown Scholar Commons https://scholarcommons.sc.edu/etd/1460 https://scholarcommons.sc.edu/cgi/viewcontent.cgi?article=2461&context=etd Theses and Dissertations Alaska Packers Association Alutiiq fishing gear Hynes v Grimes Packing Co Kodiak salmon Arts and Humanities History text 2011 ftunivsouthcar 2022-06-15T20:18:29Z Fishing gear is indisputably central to the act of fishing, yet its importance to the history of commercial salmon fishing has been neglected. This thesis investigates the manifold ways that Native and white fishermen, canners, and federal bureaucrats utilized the beach seine and purse seine to construct the salmon fishery. Using the creation of the Karluk Reservation in 1943 as a case study, this thesis shows how people used fishing technologies to assert control over the unwieldy environment and the humans within it. Fishermen converted the land and water into a technological instrument to make it more amenable to salmon fishing. The improved fishing grounds became racially and technologically exclusive spaces, which inhibited the ability of Karluk villagers, Alutiiq Natives that beach seined for the Alaska Packers Association, to make an adequate living. A lack of ownership of fishing gear and vessels, federal fishing regulations, and increased competition from purse seiners further limited the potential profits of the villagers. This case study demonstrates that fishing technologies are at the core of many of the perennial conflicts within the commercial salmon fishery. Text alutiiq Kodiak Alaska University of South Carolina Libraries: Scholar Commons
institution Open Polar
collection University of South Carolina Libraries: Scholar Commons
op_collection_id ftunivsouthcar
language unknown
topic Alaska Packers Association
Alutiiq
fishing gear
Hynes v Grimes Packing Co
Kodiak
salmon
Arts and Humanities
History
spellingShingle Alaska Packers Association
Alutiiq
fishing gear
Hynes v Grimes Packing Co
Kodiak
salmon
Arts and Humanities
History
Grantham, Anjuli Fair
Fishing At Karluk: Nature, Technology, and the Creation of the Karluk Reservation In Territorial Alaska
topic_facet Alaska Packers Association
Alutiiq
fishing gear
Hynes v Grimes Packing Co
Kodiak
salmon
Arts and Humanities
History
description Fishing gear is indisputably central to the act of fishing, yet its importance to the history of commercial salmon fishing has been neglected. This thesis investigates the manifold ways that Native and white fishermen, canners, and federal bureaucrats utilized the beach seine and purse seine to construct the salmon fishery. Using the creation of the Karluk Reservation in 1943 as a case study, this thesis shows how people used fishing technologies to assert control over the unwieldy environment and the humans within it. Fishermen converted the land and water into a technological instrument to make it more amenable to salmon fishing. The improved fishing grounds became racially and technologically exclusive spaces, which inhibited the ability of Karluk villagers, Alutiiq Natives that beach seined for the Alaska Packers Association, to make an adequate living. A lack of ownership of fishing gear and vessels, federal fishing regulations, and increased competition from purse seiners further limited the potential profits of the villagers. This case study demonstrates that fishing technologies are at the core of many of the perennial conflicts within the commercial salmon fishery.
format Text
author Grantham, Anjuli Fair
author_facet Grantham, Anjuli Fair
author_sort Grantham, Anjuli Fair
title Fishing At Karluk: Nature, Technology, and the Creation of the Karluk Reservation In Territorial Alaska
title_short Fishing At Karluk: Nature, Technology, and the Creation of the Karluk Reservation In Territorial Alaska
title_full Fishing At Karluk: Nature, Technology, and the Creation of the Karluk Reservation In Territorial Alaska
title_fullStr Fishing At Karluk: Nature, Technology, and the Creation of the Karluk Reservation In Territorial Alaska
title_full_unstemmed Fishing At Karluk: Nature, Technology, and the Creation of the Karluk Reservation In Territorial Alaska
title_sort fishing at karluk: nature, technology, and the creation of the karluk reservation in territorial alaska
publisher Scholar Commons
publishDate 2011
url https://scholarcommons.sc.edu/etd/1460
https://scholarcommons.sc.edu/cgi/viewcontent.cgi?article=2461&context=etd
genre alutiiq
Kodiak
Alaska
genre_facet alutiiq
Kodiak
Alaska
op_source Theses and Dissertations
op_relation https://scholarcommons.sc.edu/etd/1460
https://scholarcommons.sc.edu/cgi/viewcontent.cgi?article=2461&context=etd
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