Ethnology of the Ungava District, Hudson Bay Territory

Ethnology of the Ungava District, Hudson Bay Territory

Ethnology of the Ungava District, Hudson Bay Territory

Ethnology of the Ungava District, Hudson Bay Territory

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Overview

Lucien Turner arrived at the present-day community of Kuujjuaq on the northern Quebec-Labrador peninsula in 1882. As with his earlier long-term appointments in Alaska, he primarily conducted meteorological, atmospheric, and tidal observations for the U.S. Army's Signal Corps. But he also developed a meaningful rapport with the Innu and Inuit, spending his free time studying and recording not only their material culture—including clothing, dwellings, weapons, and tools—but also their lifeways, language, and stories. His images of these people and their camps are among the earliest examples of photography of the Arctic. As Stephen Loring Notes in the introduction, "With few exceptions—Inuit shamanistic paraphernalia and Innu hunting charms—the majority of the materials Turner collected were artifacts and clothing used in day-to-day activities. The passage of time and the miracle of conservation have transformed these ethnographic minutiae, these objects and materials of relatively minor significance on the past, into treasured cultural icons." Especially notable for Lucien Turner's descriptions of nineteenth-century Native material culture, Ethnology of the Ungava District, Hudson Bay Territory was originally published in 1894 as part of the Smithsonian's Annual Report of the Bureau of American Ethnology series—often considered to mark the beginning of American anthropological studies. This reissue ensures that Turner's work continues to be a classic introduction to the culture of the Innu and Inuit people of northern Quebec and Labrador.

Product Details

ISBN-13: 9781935623465
Publisher: Smithsonian Institution Press
Publication date: 07/01/2014
Series: Classics of Smithsonian Anthropology
Sold by: Penguin Random House Publisher Services
Format: eBook
Pages: 189
File size: 13 MB
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About the Author

Lucien M. Turner (1848-1909) contributed significantly to the collections of the Smithsonian Institution; he was the author of Contributions to the Natural History of Alaska (1868).

Stephen Loring is an anthropologist at the Arctic Studies Center of the Smithsonian's National Museum of Natural History.

Table of Contents

Introduction167
Fort Chimo and the surrounding region167
Climate172
Auroras173
Vegetation173
Animal life174
Mammals174
Birds175
The native inhabitants of the country--general sketch175
The Eskimo175
The Indians181
Special account of the people around Fort Chimo184
The Koksoagmynt184
Physical characteristics184
Diseases187
Marriage188
Children190
Burial customs191
Religion193
Outdoor life202
Tattooing207
Clothing208
Dwellings223
Household articles228
Food and its preparation232
Tobacco and snuff234
Means of transportation235
By water235
On land240
Weapons and other hunting implements246
Hunting249
Miscellaneous implements252
Amusements254
Art259
Story-telling and folklore260
Origin of the Innuit261
The coming of the white people261
Origin of living things on the earth and in the water261
Origin of the guillemots262
Origin of the raven262
Origin of the quadrangular spots on the loon's back262
Origin of the gulls263
Origin of the hawks263
Origin of the swallow263
The hare263
The wolf263
Lice263
Origin of mosquitoes264
Story of the man and his fox wife264
The rivals264
The jealous man264
Story of the orphan boy265
The origin of the sun, moon, and stars266
Auroras266
The sky266
The winds267
The Nenenot or "Naskopie"267
Principal characteristics267
Clothing281
Preparation of the skins for clothing292
Dwellings298
Sweat houses300
Household utensils, etc300
Tobacco and pipes302
Means of transportation304
By water304
By land308
Weapons312
Hunting316
Miscellaneous implements, tools, etc317
Amusements320
Festivals322
Folklore327
Story of the wolverine and the brant327
Story of the wolverine327
The deer and the squirrel328
The young man who went to live with the deer328
The wolf's daughter going to seek her lover330
The devil punishing a liar333
A wolverine destroys his sister333
The rabbit and the frog334
The wolverine and the rock336
Creation of people by the wolverine and the muskrat338
Origin of the whitish spot on the throat of the marten338
The Indian and his beaver wife339
The venturesome hare340
The spirit guiding a child left by its parents342
Fate of two Indian men343
The starving wolverine345
The starving Indians349
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