This work examines atiku-euiash (caribou meat) sharing practices in Sheshatshiu, Newfoundland and Labrador, and aims to elucidate an overarching question: how do sharing practices participate in the co-constitution of the Innu ‘social’? The ‘social’ is understood in this work as a descriptor that refers to the emergent properties of the Innu collective. The thesis is that sharing practices participate in the co-constitution of the Innu social and enact its boundaries. Inside these boundaries, atiku-euiash is more than simply a food resource: by realizing Innu values of generosity, respect and autonomy, sharing implicates the associations of human, animal, and animal masters that constitute the Innu world. Sharing is connected with the enski...
From June 1992 to July 1993, research on wildlife harvesting and subsistence was conducted among a s...
Food sharing has been a central focus of research in human behavioral ecology and anthropology more ...
The people of Labrador, especially the Inuit, rely on their surrounding resources to sustain themsel...
abstract: Tłįchǫ, an indigenous Dene nation of subarctic Canada, maintain subsistence lifestyles bas...
Subsistence food sharing in Ust’-Avam (Taimyr Region, Russian Federation) is analyzed in light of Ar...
Climate change leading to a drastic decline in caribou populations has prompted strict hunting regul...
Climate change leading to a drastic decline in caribou populations has prompted strict hunting regul...
Many caribou populations are declining across the Circumpolar North, presenting challenges for many ...
Social inquiry into hunting dynamics in northern indigenous communities in Canada has tended to focu...
In recent Inuit ethnography, a major concern has been how and to what extent contemporary Inuit part...
Archaeological research into the Labrador Inuit past has shed considerable light on material culture...
Subsistence, including hunting, sharing the proceeds of the hunt, and the social relations associate...
Caribou (tuktuit) are embedded in northern life, and have been part of Inuit culture and seasonal ro...
Food sharing has been a central focus of research in human behavioral ecology and anthropology more ...
Empirical data on food sharing in native Dolgan, Nganasan, and Nenets communities in Siberia provide...
From June 1992 to July 1993, research on wildlife harvesting and subsistence was conducted among a s...
Food sharing has been a central focus of research in human behavioral ecology and anthropology more ...
The people of Labrador, especially the Inuit, rely on their surrounding resources to sustain themsel...
abstract: Tłįchǫ, an indigenous Dene nation of subarctic Canada, maintain subsistence lifestyles bas...
Subsistence food sharing in Ust’-Avam (Taimyr Region, Russian Federation) is analyzed in light of Ar...
Climate change leading to a drastic decline in caribou populations has prompted strict hunting regul...
Climate change leading to a drastic decline in caribou populations has prompted strict hunting regul...
Many caribou populations are declining across the Circumpolar North, presenting challenges for many ...
Social inquiry into hunting dynamics in northern indigenous communities in Canada has tended to focu...
In recent Inuit ethnography, a major concern has been how and to what extent contemporary Inuit part...
Archaeological research into the Labrador Inuit past has shed considerable light on material culture...
Subsistence, including hunting, sharing the proceeds of the hunt, and the social relations associate...
Caribou (tuktuit) are embedded in northern life, and have been part of Inuit culture and seasonal ro...
Food sharing has been a central focus of research in human behavioral ecology and anthropology more ...
Empirical data on food sharing in native Dolgan, Nganasan, and Nenets communities in Siberia provide...
From June 1992 to July 1993, research on wildlife harvesting and subsistence was conducted among a s...
Food sharing has been a central focus of research in human behavioral ecology and anthropology more ...
The people of Labrador, especially the Inuit, rely on their surrounding resources to sustain themsel...