Cross-Cultural Issues in
Alaskan Education
Vol. I
THE SCHOOL CULTURAL HERITAGE PROGRAM:
SOME QUESTIONS
by
Jan Gibson
Kuskokwim Community College, Bethel
Introduction
It is probably safe to say that most teachers and administrators
in schools serving Alaskan Eskimos and Indians have at least entertained
the idea of
incorporating local history and cultural heritage into the school curriculum.
The demand for minority rights nationally, the issues raised as a result
of the Alaska Native Claims Settlement Act, and the availability of federal
grants for cultural heritage projects have inspired numerous attempts at
teaching Native students about their own traditions. Unfortunately, many
of these programs have been planned without adequate research, have had
questionable results, and have not continued as a regular part of the curriculum
upon
the termination of the initial project.
Many advocates of cultural heritage
programs do not seem to realize that a good program or project requires
careful planning and thoughtful consideration
of the issues involved. There are major questions which must be answered
as part of the planning process. One of these questions is, “What
is the local cultural heritage and how does one find out about it?” Most
educators have no background in the subject and little in the way of
the texts, audio-visual aids, and expertise which are available to them
in curriculum areas such as math and reading. Although there are books
which
offer information about Alaskan Eskimos and Indians in general, there
is often little written about the background of any one locality.
The purposes
of any particular program should be given careful consideration. Enhancement
of the student’s identity as an Indian or an Eskimo is
often given as the rationale for cultural heritage programs. Is it likely
to be true that an Eskimo fifth grader will feel more confidently Eskimo
if he learns how to carve an ivory seal? Or is it important that he learn
how to make some of the traditional crafts so that he can sell them and
supplement his income? There are other questions. What is the feeling
within the community
about cultural heritage studies? Do local people really want these things
taught? If so, why? In what way do they value them? How can information
about the students’ historical past best be presented and who should
do the teaching?
In an effort to deal with some of these questions as
they apply to one Eskimo community, I took photographs and examples
of traditional craft
work to Nunivak
Island in the summer of 1972 and conducted interviews with 62 Nunivakers
between the ages of 6 and 72. The purpose of the study was to clarify
the relationship of present day Nunivak Islanders to their art heritage
and to
make some recommendations for curriculum development. The interviews
included questions about the traditional crafts of Nunivak Island and
related stories,
dances, and songs.
Due to the relative isolation of Nunivak Island,
the traditional Nunivak way of life was not seriously threatened by outside
influences until
after 1940. As a result, there is more written information about
Nunivak arts
than about most others in the Southwest Alaskan area. A review of
the literature showed that this particular part of the world was a center
for excellent
ivory carving, wooden dish, utensil, and mask making in the nineteenth
century
and, to some extent, in the early years of this century. The women’s
crafts of basket making and skin sewing have persisted into the present.
Little is known of prehistoric art in this region and there are no
comprehensive studies of any craft of the area other than mask making.
All of these crafts
are represented in publications and in museums throughout the world.
Results
of the Interviews
The results of the interviews with Nunivakers
can be summarized as follows:
1. The older the interviewee the more likely
he was to recognize traditional art work and to understand its original
purpose. The old people were
the only acknowledged authorities in these matters. It was
clear that traditional
craft skills were not being passed on to the younger generations.
Although most of the interviewees did some type of craft work,
only the older
ones were inclined toward the traditional crafts included in
this study. More
girls and women than boys and men did some type of craft work.
2.
Masks which were close in appearance to recent Nunivak masks were recognized
by more people than other styles, and, in fact,
response
to older area-wide
styles was slight.
3. Masks were not in use in the village
at the time of the study and had not been so for many years. Only the oldest
interviewees had actually
seen
masks used in dances and ceremonies. Wooden dishes were
apparently not in use at all at the time of the study and carved ivory
objects
were
no longer
produced primarily for local use. Grass baskets were still
made partly for use and the other women’s craft,
skin sewing, was the most functional of all the traditional
crafts
at the time of the study.
4. When asked which crafts are
most important today, members of each sex tended to emphasize
the crafts made primarily
by members
of that
sex. Over
all, crafts were rated the most important to the least
important as follows: mask making, skin sewing, grass work,
ivory carving,
and wooden
dish
and utensil making. The crafts made primarily by men, (masks,
ivory, and wooden
ware) were termed important mainly for their sale value
whereas the crafts made by women, grass work and skin sewing,
were
made both
for sale and
for use. Nearly everyone interviewed wanted Nunivak children
to learn about the
crafts, stories, songs, and dances, which were discussed
during the interviews. Interviewees indicated very little
belief that
the children
would ever
sell or use the craft items and placed more emphasis on
group identity values.
5. Most people approved of the idea
of sharing of Nunivak traditional arts and activities with other Eskimo
villages, and, to a lesser
extent, with
White children. Nunivakers stated very strongly that
they wanted Nunivak children to be taught about Nunivak things
by Nunivak
people.
Discussion
Taken together, the interviews and the review of the
literature indicated a pattern of changing values which
have been
associated with the
crafts over the last one hundred years. In the nineteenth
and early twentieth
centuries,
the crafts were made for use within Eskimo culture.
They can be said to have had utilitarian value as opposed
to sale/trade value.
When local materials, religion,
and social practices were replaced with materials and ideas from the “outside,” and
Nunivakers became involved in the souvenir trade in this century, many
crafts lost much of their utilitarian
value. At the same time that manufactured items became
available, a market for craft items opened and the crafts were then traded
for goods or sold
for money. At that time, probably beginning in the
1920’s, the reasons
for making many of the crafts objects became less
for personal or family use than for sale or trade to outsiders. The crafts
can
be said to have gained
an economic value which they did not have before.
Now,
indications are that this value, too, many be disappearing as the older
people who know how to
produce these things
pass from the
scene
and other
ways to obtain cash become available. For example,
most of the interviewees had no real expectations
that the
village children
would ever make
crafts either for their own use of for sale, and
yet, they nearly all wanted
the children to know about them. These things seemed
to be
gaining a new importance,
not because they were to be used or sold, but solely
because they were identified as Nunivak Eskimo
things. The emerging
value was
cultural
identity value.
It cannot be said that this type of value was not
previously attached to the crafts; that is, that
they were not
valued for their “Nunivakness,” or
their “Eskimoness,” but in traditional
times there was no pressure to make an issue of
it. In precontact and early contact times, the
local
value system was not jeopardized by outside forces.
The issue of ethnocultural “identity” had
no meaning when nearly everyone, regardless of
whether Mainlander or Islander, subscribed to essentially
the same cultural patterns and system of values.
The
reasons for the new valuing of Nunivak Eskimo
things by Nunivak Eskimos may be speculated upon.
Perhaps
publicity concerning
minority rights
from the “outside” or the political
climate involving the Native Land claims issues
has affected local opinion. It may be that changed
attitudes
of some personnel in agencies and institutions
toward Native cultural heritage and accompanying
grants for studies and programs have had their
influence.
Or, perhaps increased sophistication on the part
of residents in regard to the effects of “acculturation” on
the local value system has occurred. Most likely,
a combination of events and circumstances has stimulated
thinking which has led to the new valuing of Nunivak
arts.
Whatever the causes, certainly a question
is raised in regard to the relationship of cultural
heritage
studies
and the
concept of
identity.
If an interviewee
knew nothing about the crafts, if he had never
used them, and therefore had no basis of association
with
his cultural
group
until the interviewer
appeared on the scene, and told him that these
were Nunivak or Eskimo things, how could these
things
be a part of
his identity, a concept
which Erik Erikson
spoke of as being an “irreversible historical
fact” (1 968:11)
or the basis of the feeling, “I am,” or “I
exist?” (Cohen
and Brawer, 1972:10) The answer may be that it
he had already established the category of “Eskimo
things” or “Nunivak things” as
valuable, and as a part of himself, then he needed
only to learn that a piece of craft work belonged
to the valued category in order to value and accept
it. Certainly the older people, who had known these
objects as parts of their
lives, could be said to identify more closely and
automatically with some of the arts and crafts,
but the desire of the younger people not to lose
these things, even when it is obvious that the
crafts mean little to them
in terms of their practical, everyday lives, is
not to be discounted.
Also, it would appear that
an element of choice is possible in identification
with a group of people
or the things
that one
associates with that
group. Erikson seemed to agree that the inclusion
of things in one’s identity
or the things one identifies with can come from
conscious choice although this will often be done
in response to pressures that threaten one’s
basic value system (1964:93). Fitzgerald discussed
a related phenomenon in his inquiry into the complexity
of acculturation processes and the Maori
of New Zealand. He implied that although one may
never have experienced aspects of a given cultural
heritage, he may make them a part of his ethnic
identity,
even to having the identity without the culture
(1970:14). And, indeed, this would seem to be so.
If, in the early thirties, as one Christian missionary
claims, Nunivakers “threw their idols into
the sea,” (Almquist,
1962:52) and in 1972 they told me that they wanted
their children to be taught about the traditional
Nunivak things, then choice seems possible, however
it might be influenced by historical pressure.
A
critic of this change in viewpoint might point
out that people always cling sentimentally to a
way of
life that
is passing
before they give
it up for
good. Erikson might, judging from some of his comments
on similar subjects, be inclined to say that the
Nunivak people,
threatened
with the rush
of acculturative influences now hope to bolster
a tentative sense of centrality
or ethno-cultural
self with things that are no longer relevant to
their everyday lives. He might even wonder whether
they
are attempting
to maintain a “synthetic” identity.
What seems important to this writer is that the
individual accepts himself and his own background,
ethno-cultural, or otherwise, and successfully
integrates it into his personal whole. A sense
of belonging to a shared past and a shared future
with the group with which one associates himself
would most likely facilitate this integration.
The
problem is that Nunivakers have grown to adulthood
in a culture which had traditionally passed on
its values, history,
and religion
by means
of observation and the oral tradition. With the
observable traditional activities
partially gone and the oral tradition interrupted
by Western schooling, it is very difficult for
Nunivak young people
and
children, under
present circumstances
to learn much about their own history which could
be
integrated into a personal whole. To complicate
the situation, Nunivakers
who complete
eighth grade
usually go on to a boarding school away from home
for their high school years. In the case of the
Nunivakers, the mechanism
for
transmitting the Eskimo
past has been displaced by a mechanism which transmits
other content. The content is the heritage and
value system of
their cultural “in-laws,” the
members of the dominant national culture.
However,
as shown in the interview results, there now exists
a conviction among the Nunivakers that
there
is an Eskimo
cultural heritage, although
what that heritage is does not seem to be entirely
clear, either to many of the Nunivakers or to those
who have
written about
them.
Most
interviewees
felt that whatever it is tied in some way to the
old people in the village and embodied in their
memories and skills.
Along with this
is a strong
desire to have those things which are identified
as
being “Eskimo” valued
and respected and taught to the younger Nunivakers,
regardless of the antiquity or lack of it of the
objects or traditions.
Recommendations for School
Programs
The strongest implication of this study
is that the younger people should learn about traditional
Nunivak
arts. It
is a temptation
to recommend
that the village school immediately begin to
teach Eskimo history, arts, and
crafts, and other aspects of Eskimo cultural
heritage. However, it would be wise
to think of what the interviewees said in response
to the question, “Who
do you think knows the most about these thing?” The
old people in the village were cited as the authorities
and were the ones whom a substantial
proportion of the interviewees wanted to teach
the children. Because feelings about the Nunivak
past appear to be tied closely to feelings about
the oldest
people in the village, the desire to have them
act as teachers should be respected.
Also, while
some teachers have read and studied Eskimo history,
the teacher’s
access to knowledge of such matters is likely
to be largely that which is available in the
literature, and the available literature seems
to be both
limited in detail and written from the interested
and often sympathetic, but nevertheless ethnocentric
viewpoint of people who were not a part of
the culture about which they are writing. Their
records may be of value in explaining Nunivak
arts to outsiders or in organizing materials,
but should
not be used as the sole source of information
when knowledgeable older people who grew to adulthood
within the traditional culture are available.
An exception
to that might be the presentation of such traditional
arts as nineteenth century masks, which no longer
exist in the village.
It is this writer’s
recommendation that the following guidelines
be utilized for the teaching of Eskimo arts on
Nunivak Island and other places
in similar cultural circumstances.
1. In the formal
school situation, Eskimo arts should be given their own place in the curriculum.
A cultural
heritage
program
need not
be limited
to the items discussed in the study. They were
intended to be only representative of traditional
arts. Nunivak
Islanders
and
other
Eskimo groups have produced
a wide variety of items which were part of
the material culture as well as stories, dances,
games, and songs
which were not
specifically mentioned
in the literature, but which are still known
to at least some villagers.
2. The stance of
the school system, the university, or any other agencies or organizations
working
in the area
of cultural
heritage
should be
facilitating rather than directive. Educational
organizations should provide the mechanism
whereby the most likely environment for the
teaching of knowledge and appreciation of
the traditional
arts would
be fostered,
but the choice
of whether or not to pursue this or that
approach should be left up to the people
in the village and the local school boards.
Some things cannot be decided at all by outsiders.
For example,
one factor which
complicates any
scheme for teaching Eskimo arts is the matter
of current religious beliefs and
resulting attitudes toward the pre-Christian
use of the masks. The
masks and dances
had a central role in traditional Eskimo
religious ceremony. Any person who deals with cultural
heritage studies must
be careful to take into
consideration
local sensitivity to the traditional symbolism
and function of masks and dances.
3. Whenever
possible, older village people should be employed to teach younger people
about these
things. Responses to
the interviews
indicated
that an
initial effort on the part of the Bureau
of Indian Affairs to do just this thing
was well
received
at Mekoryuk.
Since there
seems
to be an
existing
concensus as to which people in the village
know the
most about the various “old
time things,” it should not be difficult
for an advisory school board to identify
appropriate teachers.
School teacher aides
and other regularly employed paraprofessionals
could be responsible
for
part of the presentation and
organizing of the local
Eskimo arts program because they often
give a continuity to the school program
by
their year to year presence and they should
be closely attuned to community feelings.
4.
Curriculum materials should be developed which will be supportive of the
teaching
of cultural
heritage. The schools
can present
some things which
have been collected by early explorers,
missionaries, and anthropologists and
are beyond the memory
of the
old people.
A danger of distortion
lies in the translation from the oral
to the written tradition in stories and
history, and from the three dimensional
craft with a decorated surface to the
photograph or drawing
on the
flat page and
from the use of
Yup’ik
to English. However, within the present
circumstances, this is partially unavoidable
and it is mentioned as a caution against
a callous wholesale
presentation of stories and art work
in printed form under the belief that
this
is totally capturing anyone’s “cultural
heritage.” In
general, materials should be presented
as directly and as close to their original
forms as possible.
5. The attitude of
the school personnel should be neither
condescending toward
Eskimo arts
nor should
teachers
insist that students
do or study only Eskimo art. One of the
most helpful functions of
the school
in
this regard
is that it can help show students the
rightful and unique place which Eskimo
arts hold
in world art.
Teachers should
encourage
an integrated
viewpoint
rather than suggest that there is an
either-or choice to be made.
Further Study
1. Evaluation components should be written
into cultural heritage projects. The
focus should
be on an enhanced
sense of identity
and would probably
best be done by field methods which
involve participant observation procedures. Local
school personnel,
including paraprofessionals,
could employ these
procedures in an informal manner or
community members might want to be trained and
utilized. It should be fairly easy,
through the use
of simple
questions, to find out whether or not
students know anything about
it, whether it has
any place
in their own lives beyond school, and
whether or not they think of
it as related to their own cultural
background.
2. There is still a need for further
research for materials development
and for scope
and sequence in developing
a cultural heritage
curriculum. Very
little has been written, for example,
about the women’s crafts of grass
basketry and skin sewing. Also, further
investigation might show that there
is a culturally natural sequence for
teaching craft skills so that certain
kinds of things would be taught to
some age groups and other kinds of
things to other age groups.
3. Some
comparative studies might be done
concerning this particular group
of Eskimo
people and
other groups whose
traditional basis
of identity has
been threatened or obliterated. It
may be that there are some unique
things about the
Alaskan
situation
including the rise
of an interest
in cultural
heritage studies at a time when some
of the traditional life style is
still intact.
Attitudes
toward
ethno-cultural identity
in different
groups
might be compared. Another kind of
comparison
might also be made. If young
Nunivakers have no sense of a Nunivak
past beyond their parents, whose
own information
may be limited,
how
are their attitudes
toward themselves
as
members of a group different from
young people who have had their racial and
cultural histories
taught
to them
and reinforced
by
the total environment
of home, school, religious institution,
and popular culture?
FOR FURTHER READING
Bandi, Hans-George. Eskimo Prehistory. College: University
of Alaska, 1969.
Blomberg, Nancy. Introduction to the Native Arts of Alaska. Anchorage:
Historical and Fine Arts Museum, 1972.
Collins, Henry B. “Eskimo Cultures,” Encyclopedia of
World Art, Vol. V. New York: McGraw-Hill Book Company, Inc., 1961, pp. 2-27.
Collins, Henry B., et. al., ads. The Far North: 2,000 Years of
American Eskimo and Indian Art. Washington: National Gallery of Art, 1973.
Dockstader, Frederick J. Indian Art in America: the Arts and Crafts
of the North American Indian. New York: Burns and MacEachern, 1961.
Lantis, Margaret. “The Social Culture of the Nunivak Eskimo,” Transactions
of the American Philosophical Society, Vol. XXXV, Pt. 3. Philadelphia:
American Philosophical Society, 1946.
________ . Alaskan Eskimo Ceremonialism. Seattle: University of Washingson
Press, 1947.
________ , ed. Ethnohistory in Southwestern Alaska and the Southern
Yukon. Lexington: The University Press of Kentucky, 1970.
Michael, Henry N., ed. Lieutenant Zagoskin’s Travels in Russian
America 1842-1844: The First Ethnographic and Geographic lnvestigations
in the Yukon and Kuskokwim Valleys of Alaska. Toronto: University
of Toronto Press, 1967.
Nelson, Edward W. The Eskimo About Bering Strait. Washington: Government
Printing Office, 1899.
Ray, Dorothy Jean. Eskimo Masks: Art and Ceremony. Seattle: University
of Washington Press, 1967.
________ . “Alaskan Eskimo Arts and Crafts,” The Beaver.
Autumn, 1967.
REFERENCES
Almquist, L. Arden. Covenant Mission in Alaska. Chicago: Covenant
Press, 1962.
Cohen, Arthur M., and Florence B. Brawer. Confronting Identity: The
Community College Instructor. Englewood Cliffs: Prentice-Hall,
1972.
Erickson. Erik H. “Identity and Uprootedness in Our Time,” Insight
and Responsibility. New York: VV.W. Norton and Co., Inc., 1964.
________. Identity: Youth and Crisis. New York: W.W. Norton and
Co., Inc., 1968.
Fitzgerald, Thomas K. Education and Identity: A Reconsideration
of Acculturation and Identity. U.S. Education Resources Information
Center, ERIC Document
ED 048 050,1970.
|