Are Glaciers 'Good to Think With'? Recognising Indigenous Environmental Knowledge

被引:55
作者
Cruikshank, Julie [1 ]
机构
[1] Univ British Columbia, Dept Anthropol, Vancouver, BC V5Z 1M9, Canada
关键词
Oral Tradition; Indigenous Knowledge; Environmental Change; TEK; Yukon Territory; ONTOLOGY; POLITICS;
D O I
10.1080/00664677.2012.707972
中图分类号
Q98 [人类学];
学科分类号
030303 ;
摘要
Lively debates in arctic and subarctic communities centre on potential contributions of indigenous knowledge to environmental sciences. Some scientists are now attempting to integrate traditional ecological knowledge (TEK) into existing knowledge frameworks as data. Anthropologists working with oral tradition propose an alternative approach. They reason that greater knowledge value, especially the possibility of surprises, may come from unfamiliar oral accounts that do not seem to fit easily within conventional frameworks. This paper builds on accounts I first heard from senior indigenous women in northwestern North America about unorthodox behaviour of glaciers. These glaciers were depicted as sentient, wilful beings that responded directly and sometimes dramatically to human behaviour, often with devastating results. Similar themes are documented in colonial records where such ideas were discounted as 'superstition'. Oral traditions, though, do not provide straightforward data for contemporary sciences. As practices such as oral storytelling now become recognised as knowledge and translated in new contexts, concepts like indigenous knowledge travel and accumulate meanings. Surging glaciers disrupt conceptual fields. Stories about them may prove good to 'think with' as we consider challenges of gathering diverse practices into the ubiquitous but narrowly framed category, knowledge.
引用
收藏
页码:239 / 250
页数:12
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