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Kiavallakkikput Agviq (Into the Whaling Cycle): Cetaceousness and Climate Change Among the Iñupiat of Arctic Alaska

Sakakibara, Chie

Annals of the Association of American Geographers, 2010-10, Vol.100 (4), p.1003-1012 [Periódico revisado por pares]

Washington: Taylor & Francis Group

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  • Título:
    Kiavallakkikput Agviq (Into the Whaling Cycle): Cetaceousness and Climate Change Among the Iñupiat of Arctic Alaska
  • Autor: Sakakibara, Chie
  • Assuntos: adaptación ; adaptation ; Alaska ártica ; Arctic Alaska ; ballena boreal (Balaena mysticetus) ; bowhead whale (Balaena mysticetus) ; calentamiento global ; cambio climático ; Climate change ; Cultural identity ; geografía humanística ; Geography ; Global warming ; humanistic geography ; Hunting ; Ice ; identidad cultural ; Iñupiat ; Sea ice ; Subsistence hunting ; Whales ; Whales & whaling ; Whaling ; Whaling ships ; 人文地理 ; 全球变暖 ; 北极阿拉斯加 ; 北极露脊鲸(Balaena mysticetus) ; 因纽皮特人 ; 文化认同 ; 气候变化
  • É parte de: Annals of the Association of American Geographers, 2010-10, Vol.100 (4), p.1003-1012
  • Descrição: The Iñupiat of Arctic Alaska identify themselves as the "People of the Whales." The flesh of the bowhead whale (Balaena mysticetus) is high in vitamins and other components that traditionally sustained human physiology in a climate that is unsuitable for agriculture. Not surprisingly, the People of the Whales depend on the bowhead for sustenance and cultural meaning. The bowhead remains central to Iñupiat life and culture through the hunting process, the communal distribution of meat and other body parts, and associated ceremonials and other events to sustain cultural well-being, which I call the Iñupiat whaling cycle. For this study, I coined the term cetaceousness as a hybrid of cetaceous and consciousness, which links human awareness with cetaceans or whales. I use this term to refer to human-whale interactions at all levels. Particularly in Alaska, cetaceousness is a social and emotional process for the Iñupiat to communicate with the whales. Based on my ethnographic fieldwork in Barrow and Point Hope, Alaska, from 2004 through 2007, this study reveals how collective uncertainty about the environment is expressed and managed in Iñupiat practices and, by extension, how deeply global warming penetrates the cultural core of their society. To do so, I illustrate different aspects of Iñupiat-bowhead whale relationships or the ways people make whales a central feature of their lives. By influencing the bowhead harvest and the Iñupiat homeland, climate change increases environmental uncertainties that both threaten and intensify human emotions tied to identity. This emotional intensity is revealed in the prevalence of traditional and newly invented whale-related events and performances, the number of people involved, the frequency of their involvement, and the verve or feelings with which they participate. Thus, this study investigates how collective uncertainty about the future of the environment would be expressed and managed in Iñupiat practices and, by extension, how deeply climate change penetrates the cultural core of their society. My findings demonstrate how the Iñupiat retain and strengthen their cultural identity to survive unexpected difficulties with an unpredictable environment by reinforcing their relationship with the whales.
  • Editor: Washington: Taylor & Francis Group
  • Idioma: Inglês

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