Reclaiming the gaze : examining contemporary Nuxalk perspectives on Harlan I. Smith's fieldwork photographs, 1920-1924

Archival photographs of native peoples are tricky objects. They complicate the current rhetoric of repatriation and collaboration that tends to dominate present reassertions of control by First Nations communities over objects held (or once held) by non-native institutions. Framing the reclamation o...

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Main Author: Solomonian, Adam
Format: Others
Language:English
Published: University of British Columbia 2009
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/2429/12577
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spelling ndltd-LACETR-oai-collectionscanada.gc.ca-BVAU.-125772013-06-05T04:17:45ZReclaiming the gaze : examining contemporary Nuxalk perspectives on Harlan I. Smith's fieldwork photographs, 1920-1924Solomonian, AdamArchival photographs of native peoples are tricky objects. They complicate the current rhetoric of repatriation and collaboration that tends to dominate present reassertions of control by First Nations communities over objects held (or once held) by non-native institutions. Framing the reclamation of cultural objects by First Nations peoples from non-native museums as acts of repatriation does not address instances in which little or no dialogue or collaboration exists - the instances when native peoples enter (or break into) the museum or archive through other means. The perspectives of contemporary Nuxalkmc on and employments of Harlan Smith’s photographs discussed here emerge from larger processes of self-determination and identity-making. I argue that this represents an important way in which contemporary Nuxalkmc assert a form of possession of these photographs, reclaiming and repurposing them in ways that have produced a space for these images outside of the museum archive, on their own terms.University of British Columbia2009-08-26T21:08:24Z2009-08-26T21:08:24Z20092009-08-26T21:08:24Z2009-11Electronic Thesis or Dissertation481792 bytesapplication/pdfhttp://hdl.handle.net/2429/12577eng
collection NDLTD
language English
format Others
sources NDLTD
description Archival photographs of native peoples are tricky objects. They complicate the current rhetoric of repatriation and collaboration that tends to dominate present reassertions of control by First Nations communities over objects held (or once held) by non-native institutions. Framing the reclamation of cultural objects by First Nations peoples from non-native museums as acts of repatriation does not address instances in which little or no dialogue or collaboration exists - the instances when native peoples enter (or break into) the museum or archive through other means. The perspectives of contemporary Nuxalkmc on and employments of Harlan Smith’s photographs discussed here emerge from larger processes of self-determination and identity-making. I argue that this represents an important way in which contemporary Nuxalkmc assert a form of possession of these photographs, reclaiming and repurposing them in ways that have produced a space for these images outside of the museum archive, on their own terms.
author Solomonian, Adam
spellingShingle Solomonian, Adam
Reclaiming the gaze : examining contemporary Nuxalk perspectives on Harlan I. Smith's fieldwork photographs, 1920-1924
author_facet Solomonian, Adam
author_sort Solomonian, Adam
title Reclaiming the gaze : examining contemporary Nuxalk perspectives on Harlan I. Smith's fieldwork photographs, 1920-1924
title_short Reclaiming the gaze : examining contemporary Nuxalk perspectives on Harlan I. Smith's fieldwork photographs, 1920-1924
title_full Reclaiming the gaze : examining contemporary Nuxalk perspectives on Harlan I. Smith's fieldwork photographs, 1920-1924
title_fullStr Reclaiming the gaze : examining contemporary Nuxalk perspectives on Harlan I. Smith's fieldwork photographs, 1920-1924
title_full_unstemmed Reclaiming the gaze : examining contemporary Nuxalk perspectives on Harlan I. Smith's fieldwork photographs, 1920-1924
title_sort reclaiming the gaze : examining contemporary nuxalk perspectives on harlan i. smith's fieldwork photographs, 1920-1924
publisher University of British Columbia
publishDate 2009
url http://hdl.handle.net/2429/12577
work_keys_str_mv AT solomonianadam reclaimingthegazeexaminingcontemporarynuxalkperspectivesonharlanismithsfieldworkphotographs19201924
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