Duwamish history in Duwamish voices: weaving our family stories since colonization

Duwamish people are “the People of the Inside,” “the Salmon People”—Coast Salish people who occupied a large territory inside the Olympic Mountains and the Cascade range. Ninety Longhouses were situated where Seattle and several neighbouring cities now stand. Today, over six hundred Duwamish are urb...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Allain, Julia Anne
Other Authors: Williams, Lorna
Language:English
en
Published: 2014
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/1828/5790
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spelling ndltd-uvic.ca-oai-dspace.library.uvic.ca-1828-57902016-03-07T17:18:41Z Duwamish history in Duwamish voices: weaving our family stories since colonization Allain, Julia Anne Williams, Lorna Riecken, Theodore John Duwamish oral history social justice ethnography decolonize history resilience education hidden curriculum Coast Salish family history curriculum indigenous leadership aboriginal indigenous First Nations racism Silent generation Indigenous Star of Resilience Triangle of Oppression weaving colonization critical ethnography culture American Indian Duwamish people are “the People of the Inside,” “the Salmon People”—Coast Salish people who occupied a large territory inside the Olympic Mountains and the Cascade range. Ninety Longhouses were situated where Seattle and several neighbouring cities now stand. Today, over six hundred Duwamish are urban Indigenous people without legal recognition as an American Indian tribe, still battling for rights promised by the Point Elliott Treaty of 1855. Portrayals of Duwamish history since the time of colonization are often incomplete or incorrect. A tribe member myself, I set out to record and present family stories concerning the period 1850 to the present from participants from six Duwamish families. I gathered histories told in the words of the people whose family experiences they are. It is history from a Duwamish perspective, in Duwamish voices. Collected family stories are recorded in the appendices to my dissertation. In my ethnographic study, I inquire as to what strengths have carried Duwamish people through their experiences since colonization. The stories reveal beliefs and practices which have supported the Duwamish people, and hopes for the future. Data was gathered using multiple methods, including fieldwork—visiting a master weaver; attending tribal meetings; and visiting historic sites—reading existing documents by Duwamish authors and by settlers, and interviewing, including looking at photos to elicit information. Five themes emerged from the data: Finding a True History; What Made Them Strong; Intermarriage; Working for the People; and Working with the Youth. These themes together constitute what I term the Indigenous Star of Resilience (see Figure One in Chapter Six). For me, this study has truly been swit ulis uyayus—“work that the Creator has wrapped around me” (Vi Hilbert, quoted in Yoder, 2004); work that is a gift. Graduate 0727 0452 0740 juliemorgana@yahoo.ca 2014-12-22T17:57:07Z 2014 2014-12-22 Thesis http://hdl.handle.net/1828/5790 English en http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-sa/2.5/ca/ Available to the World Wide Web
collection NDLTD
language English
en
sources NDLTD
topic Duwamish
oral history
social justice
ethnography
decolonize
history
resilience
education
hidden curriculum
Coast Salish
family history
curriculum
indigenous leadership
aboriginal
indigenous
First Nations
racism
Silent generation
Indigenous Star of Resilience
Triangle of Oppression
weaving
colonization
critical ethnography
culture
American Indian
spellingShingle Duwamish
oral history
social justice
ethnography
decolonize
history
resilience
education
hidden curriculum
Coast Salish
family history
curriculum
indigenous leadership
aboriginal
indigenous
First Nations
racism
Silent generation
Indigenous Star of Resilience
Triangle of Oppression
weaving
colonization
critical ethnography
culture
American Indian
Allain, Julia Anne
Duwamish history in Duwamish voices: weaving our family stories since colonization
description Duwamish people are “the People of the Inside,” “the Salmon People”—Coast Salish people who occupied a large territory inside the Olympic Mountains and the Cascade range. Ninety Longhouses were situated where Seattle and several neighbouring cities now stand. Today, over six hundred Duwamish are urban Indigenous people without legal recognition as an American Indian tribe, still battling for rights promised by the Point Elliott Treaty of 1855. Portrayals of Duwamish history since the time of colonization are often incomplete or incorrect. A tribe member myself, I set out to record and present family stories concerning the period 1850 to the present from participants from six Duwamish families. I gathered histories told in the words of the people whose family experiences they are. It is history from a Duwamish perspective, in Duwamish voices. Collected family stories are recorded in the appendices to my dissertation. In my ethnographic study, I inquire as to what strengths have carried Duwamish people through their experiences since colonization. The stories reveal beliefs and practices which have supported the Duwamish people, and hopes for the future. Data was gathered using multiple methods, including fieldwork—visiting a master weaver; attending tribal meetings; and visiting historic sites—reading existing documents by Duwamish authors and by settlers, and interviewing, including looking at photos to elicit information. Five themes emerged from the data: Finding a True History; What Made Them Strong; Intermarriage; Working for the People; and Working with the Youth. These themes together constitute what I term the Indigenous Star of Resilience (see Figure One in Chapter Six). For me, this study has truly been swit ulis uyayus—“work that the Creator has wrapped around me” (Vi Hilbert, quoted in Yoder, 2004); work that is a gift. === Graduate === 0727 === 0452 === 0740 === juliemorgana@yahoo.ca
author2 Williams, Lorna
author_facet Williams, Lorna
Allain, Julia Anne
author Allain, Julia Anne
author_sort Allain, Julia Anne
title Duwamish history in Duwamish voices: weaving our family stories since colonization
title_short Duwamish history in Duwamish voices: weaving our family stories since colonization
title_full Duwamish history in Duwamish voices: weaving our family stories since colonization
title_fullStr Duwamish history in Duwamish voices: weaving our family stories since colonization
title_full_unstemmed Duwamish history in Duwamish voices: weaving our family stories since colonization
title_sort duwamish history in duwamish voices: weaving our family stories since colonization
publishDate 2014
url http://hdl.handle.net/1828/5790
work_keys_str_mv AT allainjuliaanne duwamishhistoryinduwamishvoicesweavingourfamilystoriessincecolonization
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