The Gift of the Middle Tanana


Dene Pre-Colonial History in the Alaskan Interior

Price:
Sale price$76.99
Stock:
Out of Stock - Available to backorder

By Gerad M. Smith, Foreword by Charles E. Holmes, Afterword by Evelynn Combs
Imprint:
LEXINGTON BOOKS
Release Date:
Format:
PAPERBACK
Pages:
316

Request Academic Copy

Button Actions

Please copy the ISBN for submitting review copy form

Description

Gerad M. Smith is affiliate researcher in the Department of Anthropology at the University of Alaska Fairbanks.

Table of Contents Foreword by Charles E. Holmes Acknowledgments Introduction Chapter 1: The Middle Tanana People: Modern and Historical Identities Chapter 2: The Ethnographic Reconstruction of the Past: The Middle Tanana People and a Theory of Deep Reciprocity Chapter 3: Complexity and Optimality in the Archaeological Record Chapter 4: The Traditional Place Names and Language of the Middle Tanana Dene Chapter 5: Understanding Archaeological Research Chapter 6: The Holocene Environmental Context of the Middle Tanana Chapter 7: The Middle Tanana Dene and the Archaeological Traditions of the Taiga Chapter 8: Thinking About Raw Materials Chapter 9: Identifying Reciprocity and Meaning in the Material-Cultural Record Afterword by Evelynn Combs

Smith seeks to tell a complete story, and indeed this book is holistic in its viewpoint. The land beneath the boreal forest preserves a sparse archaeological record, yet one steeped in human history. Archaeological research may be harder to do in the interior forests there than elsewhere in Alaska-certainly not for the faint-hearted. Smith nonetheless reveals the rich rewards in sticking with it and through working consistently with tribal partners. The outcome is both more complex and more interesting as a result. One cannot help but be drawn into the journey -- Mary C. Stiner, University of Arizona This book integrates up-to-date discussions of anthropological theory and Northern Dene archaeology with Indigenous source material, resulting in an impressive case-study sure to be valued by archaeologists studying hunter-gatherer-fisher communities and landscapes around the globe. This work, with its detailed discussion of Dene oral history and identity, and how it relates to understanding the past, will be appreciated by not only regional specialists but by archaeologists everywhere engaged with Indigenous and other communities in the preservation of local heritage. The Gift of the Middle Tanana is a gift to archaeologists. -- H. Kory Cooper, Purdue University

You may also like

Recently viewed