Chris Cuomo, Wendy Eisner and Kenneth Hinkel,
"Environmental Change, Indigenous Knowledge, and Subsistence on Alaska's North Slope"
(page 7 of 9)
Another material and spiritual element of Iñupiaq subsistence
culture that is jeopardized by climate change is the practice of storing
meat and fish in traditional ice cellars that are dug several meters
into the permafrost.[33]
The thawing of ice cellars is a common theme in
interviews. One elder described an ice cellar, located a hundred and
fifty feet away from a river, which was entirely washed away when the
river rapidly eroded laterally. Ida Olemaun relates the importance of
ice cellars:
The ice cellars are what we store our food, especially
the whale, you know, cause it ferments more in there, gets it more
tastier. And right now there's some ice cellars that are thawing out
too fast. So we have to be real careful with that whenever we store
some whale meat, cause that's for the Thanksgiving feast, for the
Christmas feast, that we store, even our caribou, our ducks, geese . . .. When
you have meat in the ice cellars they're a lot tastier; they're not
freezer burn, they have more taste to it whereas when you store it in
the freezer, it just freezes . . .. You have to be careful now with this
global warming cause some have flooded too . . . and wastes all that meat.
Along with allowing meat to age properly, the cellars serve an
important cultural and spiritual role in Iñupiaq whaling
traditions, for a clean and empty ice cellar is required before one can
go whaling in spring. Spring cleaning of ice cellars is also a ritual in
the culture of sharing, as all stored meat and game must be consumed or
given away as part of the cleaning process. In the words of a young
Iñupiaq woman, "You have to clean out your ice cellar cause the
whale won't give itself unless it has a clean place to rest." For the
Iñupiat the loss of ice cellars is not trivial, for ice cellars
are a crucial element of Iñupiaq subsistence life ways.
As the necessity of a clean ice cellar indicates, success in
subsistence hunting depends on appropriate behavior. Of primary
importance for the Iñupiat is the virtue of sharing. The
spiritual and cultural significance of sharing, one of the core
"Iñupiat values," promoted through posters all over the North
Slope, was raised in a great many of our interviews.[34] For example,
hunting is generally described as having two fundamental purposes: to
provide for one's own family, and to share with others in the community.
Sixty-three percent of households in northern Alaska harvest game, and
ninety-two percent of households gain access to that harvest through
networks of sharing.[35]
Sharing is also believed to strongly influence
relationships with the natural and spiritual worlds, as comments by
Evelyn Donovan and Ida Olemaun illustrate:
(My parents and grandparents) always told us to share,
the hunt, the food . . .. If you are to have a successful hunt than you have
to share and give what is down there and we're taught not to waste. And
it's true that if you're not sharing and you're stingy, better way to
say it I guess, you won't have a bountiful hunting season as well. I've
experienced that. (Evelyn Donovan)
You always share the bounty that God gives you 'cause
that's . . . why it's giving of itself is that you share to the poor, the
widow, the orphans, and . . . I think that's what subsistence is all about, to
share the bounty that God has given you, and that it'll return, that
you'll have more to come back for you . . .. You know, that's what it is—all
the joy that you get from giving and it comes back in a different way to
meet your need. (Ida Olemaun)
In Iñupiaq culture, sharing has deep significance beyond its
obvious importance in ensuring survival in a harsh environment, for
sharing the natural bounty is also a way of enacting ethical virtue,
and strengthening and maintaining bonds within the human and natural
communities. Sharing with other people is necessary for maintaining good
relationships with other species, for animals will continue to give
themselves up to hunters who enact appropriate sharing
attitudes.[36]
Hunting and the Significance of Gender
We mentioned earlier that this project integrates feminist research
methods, such as highlighting Iñupiat epistemic authority, or
unique, "situated" wisdom concerning environmental change and ecological
well-being on the North Slope. Another way that feminist methods form
and inform this research is through our efforts to interview female
elders, and to work against unconscious tendencies to propagate
marginalization (such as sexist assumptions about the gender of the
local hunting experts).[37]
Social scientists have noted that there is a
limited amount of research focused on women in the Arctic and that "few
researchers anywhere in the Arctic have documented in detail the daily
routines of women and the vital contributions they make to the social
and economic vitality of their communities."[38]
We are therefore
generally attentive to matters of gender that arise in the interviews,
and ask questions about gender roles and norms when the topic arises in
the course of an interview (which admittedly occurs most often in the
course of interviews with female participants). Because the focus of our
interviews is on the natural environment, discussions related to gender
are most typically about women's roles in relation to subsistence
practices, and especially hunting.
Iñupiat women's concern with food and cleanliness, evident in
the excerpts above, should not be taken to imply that their roles in
relation to subsistence practices are limited by European notions of
femininity or women's work, or by a strict hierarchical dualism. Women
do have specific roles in hunting, including sewing the clothing that is
necessary for the hunt, skinning and butchering, and preparing meat for
consumption. But women's relationship to hunting is not necessarily
limited to the standard roles, and traditionally, women's standard roles
are not considered secondary or auxiliary to the role of animal slayer.
In her landmark 1990 essay "I'm Not the Great Hunter, My Wife Is:
Iñupiat and Anthropological Models of Gender," Bodenhorn argues
that the traditional anthropological view that in subsistence cultures
women "gather" but do not "hunt" does not fit the Iñupiaq
example; Eskimo conceptions and definitions of hunting extend beyond the
act of seeking out and killing animals, and hunting includes activities
typically characterized as women's work. Bodenhorn writes, "Among the
Iñupiat, 'hunting' is defined to include attracting, killing,
butchering, transforming the animal into food and clothing, and
following the proper rituals, all of which are needed to maintain
amicable animal/human relations."[39]
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