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Auteur
Kenn Harper is a historian, writer, and linguist, a Fellow of the Royal Geographical Society and the Royal Canadian Geographical Society, and a former member of the Historic Sites and Monuments Board of Canada. He is the author of the In Those Days series, Minik: The New York Eskimo, and Thou Shalt Do No Murder: Inuit, Injustice, and the Canadian Arctic. "Taissumani," his column on Arctic history, appears in Nunatsiaq News.
Résumé
In Give Me Winter, Give Me Dogs, Arctic historian Kenn Harper takes readers alongside Knud Rasmussen's spearheading Fifth Thule Expedition. From 1921 to 1924, Rasmussen trekked across Canada's Arctic to study Inuit there and record their stories, and perhaps most importantly to him, to immerse himself in their culture and to know them. With the support of his colleagues and Inuit guides, Rasmussen recorded the cultural practices of various Inuit groups, from taboos and shamanism to the introduction of Christianity; traditional stories and practices, and adventures and misadventures that only an Arctic landscape can provide.
Including historic photographs and illustrative maps, this book is a great resource for anyone interested in a momentous journey into Inuit culture.
Échantillon de lecture
Urpingalik: Poet of the Nattlingmiut
On March 11, 1923, Knud Rasmussen began the trip he had dreamed of for so long. He left Danish Island to head over the top of North America to Alaska, to visit as many Inuit groups as he could, including many with little experience of the Qallunaat culture that would so rapidly encroach on their ways of living. He would be accompanied on the journey by only two Inughuit, the young man Qaavigarsuaq and his female cousin Arnarulunnguaq.
They used two long sleds of the type used by the Aivilingmiut, fitted with peat and ice shoeing, and each drawn by twelve dogs. Each sled carried about 500 kilograms of supplies, two thirds of which was dog food; the rest was tea, coffee, flour, tobacco, goods to trade with Inuit, clothing, guns, and ammunition.
A day earlier, Anarqaaq and Aaqqiuq had left for Repulse Bay with a letter from Rasmussen for the Hudson's Bay Company manager, George Cleveland, to try to sort out some difficulties between the two. Rasmussen headed first for Repulse Bay where he made peace with Cleveland, then left with his party on March 18, heading northwest across Rae Isthmus.
Helge Bangsted and Anarqaaq, along with Tapaqti, Aua's son-in-law, would accompany Rasmussen's party as far as Pelly Bay, transporting additional supplies. Both Anarqaaq and Tapaqti were immigrant Nattilingmiut who had relocated to Repulse Bay and could be expected to know the Nattlingmiut Rasmussen hoped to meet.
While crossing Rae Isthmus, Tapaqti told a story to explain the presence of fossilized sea animals on the land:
Here once lived the giant Inugpasugjuk who used to catch salmon down in a precipitous ravine at the head of Pelly Bay. The ravine is called Kitingujait. Sometimes Inugpasugjuk would go hunting seal by wading out into the sea and killing them with a stick. Once he waded out in Pelly Bay to catch seals, but before this he moved all the people living by the low shores up on to the highest islands in the world. Inugpasugjuk was very eager when hunting, and once he fell; as he slipped he shovelled the water aside with one hand so violently that a wave rose and washed in over the land. This big wave washed shoals of small fish on to the shore; there were sea scorpions, cod, flounders, sand-skippers, sticklebacks, in fact all the small animals of the sea, and when the wave dropped back again, all these fish remained on the land and in time turned to stone. These are the fossils lying about everywhere, and we call them taqqutit, because they are used as wick trimmers for our blubber lamps.
They reached Committee Bay on March 28. There, in a snowstorm, they encountered Inuit.
Contenu
PART ONE - BEGINNINGS
Knud Rasmussen and the Inuit
Thule
An Inauspicious Start
Inughuit on the Expedition
PART TWO - DANISH ISLAND
Akilinirmiut: Meeting New People
Tagurnaaq and Palluq
The Caribou Inuit and the Origins of Inuit Culture
Igjugaarjuk the Shaman
Umik's New Religion
The Shaman Aua
The Wisdom of a Shaman
"To Think I Had Been So Happy": Urulu's Story
Mathiassen's Brush with Death
Jacob Olsen: "No Taboo Performances are Necessary"
The Misadventures of Peter Freuchen
Mathiassen and the Thule Culture
The Departure of Freuchen and the Inughuit
PART THREE - ACROSS ARCTIC AMERICA
Urpingalik: Poet of the Nattilingmiut
Igsivalitaq the Outlaw
Summer at Malirualik
The Deep Footprints of Tired Men
Among the Inuinnait
The Hanging of Alikammiq and Tatamirana
Among the Mackenzie Inuit
Alaskan Interlude
Siberia: The Promised Land
Najagnir: "I Have Searched in the Darkness"
The Inughuit: "We Do Not Even Have a Memorial
of Them"
"His Importance Cannot be Weighed in Words Alone"
PHOTOGRAPHS
MAPS
GLOSSARY OF INUKTITUT WORDS
REFERENCES