While I was looking at the Haida Great Flood story I was disappointed to see the cultural elimination / appropriation. Misty Isle? Moresby? Graham? Haida Gwaii / Queen Charlotte Geologic Fault? Since the Haida Nation is also in parts of Alaska, I will include them, as well.
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views • Aug 25, 2020 • Shake Up Expert Interview: Kwiaahwah
Jones, Haida Artist This video series features experts discussing
earthquake science and technology and Indigenous knowledge and oral
history about earthquakes, represented in MOA’s Northwest Coast
collection, as part of the MOA exhibition Shake Up: Preserving What
We Value. In conjunction with major seismic upgrades to the Museum,
MOA’s exhibition, Shake Up: Preserving What We Value, explores the
convergence of earthquake science and technology with the rich
Indigenous knowledge and oral history of the living cultures
represented in MOA’s Northwest Coast collection. Beyond scientific
discoveries, Shake Up also puts into the foreground traditional
knowledge of earthquakes and natural disasters that has been passed
down through generations throughout many cultures. Learn more about
the exhibition: https://moa.ubc.ca/exhibition/shake-up/
Explore the exhibition’s interactive webpage:
http://www2.moa.ubc.ca/shakeupipad/
The
Tlingit have a matrilinealkinship
system,
with children considered born into the mother's clan,
and property and hereditary roles passing through the mother's
line.[6]
Their culture and society developed in the temperate
rainforest
of the southeast Alaska
coast and the Alexander
Archipelago.
The Tlingit maintained a complex hunter-gatherer
culture based on semi-sedentary management of fisheries.[7]
An inland group, known as the Inland Tlingit, inhabits the far
northwestern part of the province of British
Columbia
and the southern Yukon
Territory
in Canada.
Gwaii
Haanas National Park Reserve and Haida Heritage Site
is Canada's newest national marine conservation area reserve. This
video takes you on a journey through the spectacular landscapes and
seascapes of Gwaii Haanas, and highlights the rich and diverse
natural environment that is now protected from mountain top to sea
floor. Connect with Gwaii Haanas on Facebook:
https://www.facebook.com/GwaiiHaanas
A
new perspective on the Gwaii Haanas Legacy Pole, a 42-foot monumental
pole commissioned by a unique cooperative management board made up of
equal members of the Haida Nation and the Government of Canada. This
video includes GoPro footage taken from the top of the pole. The
Gwaii Haanas Legacy Pole was raised at Hlk'yah GawGa (Windy Bay) on
Lyell Island on August 15, 2013. This was the first pole raised in
the Gwaii Haanas region in over 130 years. For more information
visit: http://www.parkscanada.gc.ca/gwaiihaanas
Connect with Gwaii Haanas on Facebook:
https://www.facebook.com/GwaiiHaanas
Cette vidéo est aussi disponible en français à
https://youtu.be/AGEFM_WoKpw
In this
lecture, master Haida artist Robert Davidson describes his
upbringing, his journey to becoming a Northwest Coast artist, and the
art he produces today. This lecture was given in celebration of
Native American Heritage Month in 2015. Sponsored by Sealaska
Heritage Institute and the University of Alaska Southeast.