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Abstract
YUP'IK ESKIMO CONTRIBUTIONS TO ARCTIC RESEARCH
AT THE SMITHSONIAN
Ann Fienup-Riordan
National Museum of Natural History, Arctic Studies Center
Bio
Yup'ik Eskimo men and women began their exploration of Smithsonian
ethnographic collections in 1994. Prior to the opening of the Yup'ik
mask exhibit, Agaiyuliyararput (Our Way of Making Prayer)
in 1996, elders worked with photographs of objects, but few entered
museums to see the real thing. Beginning in 1997, Yup'ik elders
have had unprecedented opportunities to visit Smithsonian collections
and view collections, including research trips to the National Museum
of the American Indian in 1997 and 2002, and the National Museum
of Natural History in 2002 and 2003. Agayuliyararput opened
doors, and those who entered found an unimagined array of artifacts,
which most had viewed only briefly when they were young. All were
deeply moved by what they saw. Elders also recognized the potential
power of museum collections to communicate renewed pride and self-respect
to a generation of young people woefully ignorant of the skills
their ancestors used to survive. Finally, in 2000 the Calista Elders
Council began to actively search for ways to bring museum objects
home. Repatriation was not the issue, as ownership of objects was
not the goal. Rather, "visual repatriation" was what they
sought – the opportunity to show and explain traditional technology
to contemporary young people. The results of their work in Smithsonian
collections has not only enriched our understanding of nineteenth-century
Yup'ik technology but laid the foundation for a new exhibit, Masterworks
of Yup'ik Science and Survival, bringing Yup'ik materials home
to Alaska in this Fourth International Polar Year.
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