Alliance and Conflict

The World System of the Iñupiaq Eskimos

By Ernest S. Burch, Jr.
Categories: Political Science, Social Sciences, Anthropology
Series: Northern Lights
Publisher: University of Calgary Press
Paperback : 9781552381427, 390 pages, June 2005
Ebook (PDF) : 9781552382806, 390 pages, June 2005

Table of contents

 

List of Illustrations

List of Tables

Preface

Iñupiaq Eskimo Orthography, Malimiut Dialect

1. Introduction

2. Hostile Relations

3. Friendly Relations

4. Conclusions

Appendix 1: A Gazetteer of Raids and Battles on Northwestern Alaska

Appendix 2: Overland Travel Routes in Northwestern Alaska

Notes

References Cited

Index

Description

 

Alliance and Conflict combines a richly descriptive study of inter–societal relations in early nineteenth–century Northwest Alaska with a bold theoretical treatise on the structure of the world system as it might have been in ancient times. Basing his account on interviews with Indigenous historians, observations made by early Western explorers, and archeological research, Ernest S. Burch Jr. illuminates one aspect of the traditional lives of the Iñupiaq in unparalleled detail and depth.

Bruch describes the social boundaries and geographic borders of Northwest Alaska and the various type of transactions that took place across them. These ranged from violence of the most brutal sort to relations of peace and friendship. Burch argues that the international system described here approximated, in many respects, the type of system that existed across the world prior to the development of agriculture. Based on that assumption, he presents a series of hypothesis about what the world system may have been like when it consisted entirely of hunter–gatherer societies, and about how it became centralized.

Accounts of specific people, places, and events add an immediate, experiential dimension to Alliance & Conflict, complementing its theoretical apparatus and its sweeping theoretical scope. Provocative and comprehensive, this is a definitive look at the greater world of the Indigenous peoples of Northwest Alaska.