Tlingit Indians of Southeastern Alaska
Section 4: TLINGIT ECONOMY: SURPLUS
5 days (1 week)
CONCEPTS: |
SURPLUS IS NECESSARY FOR TRADE, TRADE INVOLVES FILLING
A NEED OR DESIRE, TRADE WAS A SEASONAL ACTIVITY, SURPLUS IS NECESSARY FOR
A POTLATCH |
OBJECTIVES
- Students can relate at least one reason for trade among
Alaska Natives
- Students can define "surplus" and state its
relationship with trade and potlatches
- Students can name two groups with whom the Tlingits traded
- Students can explain why water routes were used for trading
purposes
- Students will compare trade/barter with purchasing from
a store
MATERIALS
- Kahtahah
- Research material on eulachon (enrichment)
- Trade Game (1 for every 6
students)
- Token pieces for Tlingit Trade Game
- Tlingit Trade Game Rule Cards (one for each
group of six students)
- Quiz 2 (in pdf)
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PREPARATION
- Obtain research information on eulachon (enrichment)
- Duplicate Quiz 2
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ACTIVITIES
NEW VOCABULARY
eulachon
spawn
commodities
boon
hazard
marmot
dentalium
abalone
Section 4: TLINGIT ECONOMY: SURPLUS
DAY 1
CONCEPT: SURPLUS, TRADE, SEASONALITY
TEXT: PAGES 12-13 IN KAHTAHAH
Now go back to pages 12 and 13 in Kahtahah,
which you previously skipped.
Spring
Eulachon Camp
One day as they were watching a bald eagle swooping
to the water for a fish. Kahtahah told her foster mother that she liked the
summer
camp best of all the places that they lived. "All winter it is dark and
cold and rainy." she said. "Then spring comes and we go up the Stikine
to the eulachon camp, but it as still cold. In summer camp there are no grizzly
bears to be afraid of and there are so many different things to do, so summer
camp is much the nicest."
The eulachon camp was where Snook's family
always stopped for two or three weeks in the spring on the way up the Stikine
to hunt grizzly bears and to gather spruce roots. There they fished for eulachon,
a sort of needlefish smaller than a herring, commonly called hooligan. These
fish came into the big rivers to spawn by the millions, sometimes before the
ice was gone. Then the men had to set their nets of woven spruce roots through
holes in the ice, but the nets were often carried away if the eulachan run came
after the breakup of the ice and the big blocks of ice rushed down the river,
sweeping everything before them. The men who went out an canoes to dip up the
fish in their baglike nets were in danger, too. Only the spring before, one
of the slaves had drowned when a cake of ice upset his canoe.
The Indians knew when a fish run was coming
because great flocks of sea gulls followed the eulachon up the river, flying
about, screaming, diving, swimming and fighting as they fed on the eulachon
all day long. The women strung hundreds of the little fish on bark ropes, hanging
them in the sun and the wind to dry, sometimes with a slow smoking fire under
them.
The
fish were so rich in oil that it dripped out while drying. But the most important
part of eulachon fishing was trying out the oil, which was done in several steps.
First, the fish were heaped in large piles until they were partially spoiled,
which separated the oil more quickly. The fish were then put in canoes or big
boxes, and water and hot rocks added. The water was kept boiling with additional
rocks until all the oil from the fish had risen to the top. When cool, the thick
grease was skimmed off and stored in wooden boxes.
When the eulachon run was large all the
Indians filled many boxes with grease. The Tlingits liked to use the oil themselves
for dipping dried halibut and salmon and as a sauce for boiled salmon eggs,
but they also traded it to Indians who did not own a spring camp on the Stikine.
Good eulachon fishing grounds made rich Indians because others traveled long
distances just to buy the oil.
ENRICHMENT: RESEARCH ON EULACHON
Some students might be interested in finding out more about
eulachon-their distribution throughout the state, for instance. Check with the
Department of Fish and Game and the book Illustrated Keys to the Fresh Water
Fishes of Alaska by J.E. Morrow (Alaska Northwest Publishing). Have the
students report to the rest of the class.
BACKGROUND INFORMATION: TRADE
Trade is introduced on page 13 of Kahtahah when the book
states, "Good eulachon fishing grounds made rich Indians because others
travelled long distances just to buy the oil." Remind students that each
Tlingit area had slightly different resources, and these differences were one
basis for trade between areas. Thus the Stikine area was rich in eulachon oil,
while the Hoonah area was rich in seal skins and seal oil.
Trading usually took place in the spring and surrvner for two
reasons: 1) travel was safest at this time; and 2) many of the resources which
were traded has just been harvested in the winter or spring, so others were
in a position of having excess goods on hand to trade.
TRADE VS. BUYING IN A STORE
Most students nowadays have had little experience with seasonal
shortages and overabundances of commodities. You will thus need to help them
stretch their imaginations to understand why trading, unlike buying things in
a store, was a seasonal activity for the Tlingits and other Native Americans
in this part of the world. Refer them back to their consideration
of what their home town would be like were there no modern amenities (the first
activity in the Athabascan unit) if they seem to have difficulty with this concept.
READINESS FOR THE TLINGIT TRADE GAME
Students were introduced to the game and its rules at the beginning
of this unit. They will now play it again, but this time you will be emphasizing
new concepts and engaging them in discussions about those concepts afterward.
The four points to emphasize at this point are:
- Tlingits traded because they wanted things that weren't
available in their area
- Tlingits were able to trade because they had a surplus
of goods (be sure to define "surplus").
- Tlingits did a large part of their trading in the spring
and summer.
- Tlingits traded with Haidas, Tsimshians, Athabascans,
and in rare cases, Eskimos.
You might design a four-question quiz around those facts, requiring
each child or group of children to achieve a perfect score before beginning
to play the game. Note that these points are also covered in the quiz at the
end of this section.
PLAY THE TLINGIT TRADE GAME
Provide students with time to play the game at least once.
DAY 2
CONCEPTS: |
SURPLUS IS NECESSARY FOR TRADE, TRADE INVOLVES FILLING
A NEED OR DESIRE, TRADE WAS A SEASONAL ACTIVITY |
PLAY TRADE GAME
Allow about half the period for students to continue playing
the game.
DISCUSSION TO FOLLOW GAME PLAYING
Discuss the information contained in the game after students
have played. Some topics or activities are:
- Which conmiodities seemed to be most valuable to the
Tlingits? Why?
- What commodities are considered valuable to the students
in their lives today? Why?
- Who would Snook probably have traded with when he was
selling his eulachon oil? What things did he probably get in return for it?
- Which of the villages on the game board did Kahtahah
live near?
- Why were the trade routes primarily along waterways?
(Note: trade routes often crossed passes to reach water
routes, the Chilkoot Pass being the best known example, but most travel did
occur by water.)
- How did, being a member of a clan affect (help or hinder)
trading? Let students refer to the Boon and Hazard cards to answer this.
- What (if anything) do students trade (stickers, pencils,
marbles, etc.)? Discuss the differences between trading with someone you
know and buying from a large grocery or department .store. (Eg: bargaining,
concern
for remaining friends after the transaction, items not being available in
stores or money not being handy, etc.)
- ENRICHMENT: If another class in your school is using the
Tlingit Trade Game, set up a trade situation with that class. Determine
as a class what coninodities the other class might want which you have, and
what you want in return. Choose negotiators to act for the entire group. Emphasize
that negotiators must have the approval of the group before making an agreement.
DAY 3
CONCEPTS: SURPLUS, POTLATCH STRUCTURE
STRUCTURE CLASS POTLATCH OR PRESENTATION
At the beginning of this unit, your class clans began preparing
to present themselves, their crests, and stories in some sort of a ceremony.
If you choose to make these presentations in a formally correct potlatch, the
following information will be important.
If, on the other hand, you plan simply to have each clan make
a presentation in turn to other clans, you need not go into the potlatch as
a social occasion.
Background information on potlatches appears on the following
five pages. Your presentation to students should include information on these
topics:
- Potlatches were made possible because of surplus food.
- Purpose or occasion for a potlatch
- Who gives the potlatch
- Who comes to the potlatch
- The structure - or what takes place
- The gifts
- Discuss how your own class plans fit within the framework
of a traditional potlatch.
THE TLINGIT POTLATCH:
A Simplified Description
Potlatches are the most highly valued enterprise in traditional
Tlingit culture. Even today, when people no longer live in clan houses and do
not always follow the ancient marriage rules, a potlatch is still the most important
thing a clan does.
A potlatch is more than a party or feast. It is given for a
specific purpose and it has a specific form. It is given by one clan, and the
guests are of other clans. Here's how it works:
PURPOSE OR OCCASION FOR A POTLATCH
Traditionally, a potlatch was held when a new clan house had
been built and needed to be dedicated, as a memorial feast for a recently deceased
clan member, or as a rite of passage for a young person entering adulthood.
Nowadays, added to those occasions are the honoring of a past
or present clan member, perhaps giving that person one of the traditionally
owned clan names which are recycled generation after generation, and adopting
non-Tlingits (usually spouses of Tlingits) into the society.
Translated into a classroom activity, a simulated potlatch could
be given to announce the name of the class or classroom, to honor the teacher
or formally introduce him or her to the parents or guests, to display class
projects, or to formally introduce all class members to the guests.
WHO GIVES THE POTLATCH
A potlatch is given by a clan -- a large group
of related people. In the old days, it was the house group
which gave the potlatch, aided by other house groups within
the clan. (In some cases, there was only one house for a clan; in others, the
clan was so large that it had three or four houses. An individual was born into
a certain house within the clan, and did not move from house to house.)
Clan membership comes from a person's mother. Whether boy or
girl, the child is automatically a member of his or her mother's clan.. The
father is of a different clan (one could not marry within the clan).
In the classroom, clan membership can be simulated. All class
members are "related" to one another for purposes of the potlatch.
They should choose a name and a crest design to represent themselves. It would
also be appropriate to tell the story of how the crest design came to be theirs
at the potlatch.
WHO COMES TO THE POTLATCH
Within Tlingit society, people are either Raven or Eagles. About
half of the people are each. Clans are also either Raven or Eagle clans. Thus,
a child inherits both the clan membership and the designation of Raven or Eagle
from its mother. There are about 25 Raven clans, and 25 Eagle clans.
When a clan gives a potlatch, it invites members of the opposite
group. That is, if the clan is a Raven clan, all the guests would be Eagles,
and vice versa.
The host clan decides which opposite clans to invite by remembering
who has invited it to potlatches in the past. The potlatch is a sort of social
obligation to those who have hosted you.
In the classroom, the guests, even if they are mothers of you
students, must be considered of the opposite group. (Remember that a person's
father, husband, and brother-in-law are members of the opposite group in Tlingit
society. It is therefore coroTlon and correct to have those people as guests
at one's potlatch.)
Inform your guests of their group designation as they enter
your room, perhaps with an information booklet to explain why, for purposes
of the potlatch, they are not related to their children.
THE STRUCTURE OF THE POTLATCH
In the past, potlatches lasted tour days. Nowadays, they are
shorter, but have the same basic structure. The steps in planning and giving
a potlatch are:
First, a clan must have worked hard enough to meet all its
food, clothing, and shelter needs, and to have some surplus goods as well.
Because a potlatch costs so much in time, food, valuables, and nowadays in
money, this
first step is crucial. Second, the clan invites the guests months in advance,
telling them the purpose of the potlatch. All guests must accept the invitation.
When the guests arrive at the village or clan house of the hosts,
the chief of each clan gives a speech complimenting and thanking his hosts for
inviting him. The host then gives a speech welcoming and complimenting the guests.
Then, one of the hosts introduces the guests (one at a time) and seats him or
her in a prearranged location. Protocol and formality are important parts of
Tlingit culture, and children learn early the proper forms of politeness and
respect for others. These lessons are put to practice in the potlatch.
The potlatch then begins. The activities proceed in the following
order:
1. First day: Guests are served food (great amounts of it)
by members of the host clan. They don't have to get up
to get their own food. Hosts then serve themselves. After the feast, the hosts
dance for the guests, in doing so displaying clan treasures and explaining in
song how they came to be the property of the clan.
2. Second day: The visitors dance for the hosts. These dances
are also story - dances, representing some occurrence in the guest clans' histories.
3. Third day: Theatricals and contests between the clans
are held.
4. Fourth day: Gifts are given to the guests by the hosts.
Guests depart.
THE GIFTS
In the past, the gifts given were coppers (large pieces of worked
copper obtained from Athabascans in the Copper River area) or slaves.
Nowadays, gifts are blankets, money, flowers, canned goods,
soda, fresh fruit, scarves, and clothing. The gifts are given to the guests
according to their rank: highest ranking people (nowadays there aren't strict
rankings, but people considered of highest status) are given gifts of the greatest
value, and served first.
In the classroom, some handmade art projects, food, etc. can
be given to the guests.
THE ROLE OF THE GUESTS
Gifts are given to guests for two reasons: First, because
the guest clans have each, in the past, given gifts to the hosts at potlatches
of their own. And second, because the guests are performing a
service for the hosts.
This service consists of being witnesses. In Tlingit culture,
because it was traditionally an oral culture, social facts (such as marriage,
naming, house building and ownership) were recorded in the public memory, not
on paper. Guests attested to the fact that the claims or honors given by a clan
had been legally made. In a culture where ownership rights were considered extremely
important (similar to our own modern culture), it was vital that a group's,
claim to anything, from a clan crest or story to high status, be validated by
other members of the society. This kept disputes over property to a minimum.
In the classroom, this validation by the guests comes in the
form of acknowledging that the class is indeed named what the students wish
to name it; or that the students have a right to be proud of their members and
teacher; and so on.
SUMMARY: RULES OF THE POTLATCH
1. Potlatches can only be given to people of the opposite
side.
2. Potlatches must have a purpose related to the identity
of the hosts as a unified clan: either displaying one's
crests, thus asserting who they are, or honoring a past
or present clan member.
3. The host gives gifts.
4. The gifts must be returned at a potlatch by the guest
clans. There is no time limit, but in the past, six or
seven years was considered ample time to reciprocate.
5. Enjoy yourselves!
DAY 4
PLAN CLAN PRESENTATIONS
Provide students with a day to finish planning for clan presentations
or the class potlatch.
Send out invitations to guests.
REVIEW FOR QUIZ
Point out the Tools of the Trade
poster to the students, since one of the questions on the quiz deals with tools.
Also review Worksheet 6 with students,
since matrilineality and moieties will be on the quiz.
DAY 5
Quiz 2
Quiz 2 (in pdf)
Quiz 2 Answers (in pdf)
TABLE OF CONTENTS
MATERIALS LIST & GOALS
SECTION 1: Tlingit
Country
SECTION 2:
Clans
SECTION 3: Summer
Camp
SECTION 4: Tlingit
Economy: Surplus
SECTION 5: Wrap
Up
APPENDIX A: Brief
Description of Tlingit Culture
APPENDIX B: A Sample
Winter Clan House
APPENDIX C: Northwest
Coast Materials in ASD AVS Center
APPENDIX D: Juvenile
Literature on Northwest Coast Cultures
APPENDIX E: Art
Bibliography
APPENDIX F: Northwest
Coast Cultures Bibliography
APPENDIX G: Schools
Which Own Northwest Coast Study Prints
APPENDIX H: Raven
Stories (reprints)
APPENDIX I: Recorded
Versions of Clan Crest Stories
APPENDIX J: Some
Northwest Coast Art Activities
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