Visiting With the Ancestors

Blackfoot Shirts in Museum Spaces

By Laura Peers & Alison K. Brown
Categories: Indigenous Studies, Literature & Language Studies, Linguistics, Language & Translation Studies
Series: Campus Alberta Collection
Publisher: Athabasca University Press
Paperback : 9781771990370, 264 pages, June 2016
Ebook (PDF) : 9781771990387, 232 pages, September 2016
Ebook (EPUB) : 9781771990394, 232 pages, September 2016
Ebook (Kindle) : 9781771990400, 232 pages, September 2016

Table of contents

List of Illustrations
Blackfoot Sacred Protocol
Introduction
1. Gifts from the Sun
2. Introducing the Blackfoot Nations
3. The Blackfoot and the Fur Trade
4. Blackfoot Clothing
5. Making Relations in the Past
6. Making Relations in the Present
The Importance of the Blackfoot Shirts Today
Connecting with Community / Wendy Aitkens
7. Planning the Project and Raising the Funds
Preparing to Travel
Lending a Helping Hand / Heather Richardson
8. Visiting the Shirts
Our People Still Believe / Herman Yellow Old Woman
A College Student’s Perspective / Alison Frank-Tailfeathers
Questions About the Shirts
9. Community Effects
Preparing for Our Ancestors to Come Home / Ramona Big Head
A Conversation About Blackfoot Quillwork / Debbie Magee Sherer and Alison K. Brown
10. Why Were the Shirts Not Repatriated?
Continuing the Relationship
“They Will Matter to Us Forever”

Acknowledgments
References

Description

In 2010, five magnificent Blackfoot shirts, now owned by the University of Oxford’s Pitt Rivers Museum, were brought to Alberta to be exhibited at the Glenbow Museum, in Calgary, and the Galt Museum, in Lethbridge. The shirts had not returned to Blackfoot territory since 1841, when officers of the Hudson’s Bay Company acquired them. The shirts were later transported to England, where they had remained ever since.

Exhibiting the shirts at the museums was, however, only one part of the project undertaken by Laura Peers and Alison Brown. Prior to the installation of the exhibits, groups of Blackfoot people—hundreds altogether—participated in special “handling sessions,” in which they were able to touch the shirts and examine them up close. The shirts, some painted with mineral pigments and adorned with porcupine quillwork, others decorated with locks of human and horse hair, took the breath away of those who saw, smelled, and touched them. Long-dormant memories were awakened, and many of the participants described a powerful sense of connection and familiarity with the shirts, which still house the spirit of the ancestors who wore them.

In the pages of this beautifully illustrated volume is the story of an effort to build a bridge between museums and source communities, in hopes of establishing stronger, more sustaining relationships between the two and spurring change in prevailing museum policies. Negotiating the tension between a museum’s institutional protocol and Blackfoot cultural protocol was challenging, but the experience described both by the authors and by Blackfoot contributors to the volume was transformative. Museums seek to preserve objects for posterity. This volume demonstrates that the emotional and spiritual power of objects does not vanish with the death of those who created them. For Blackfoot people today, these shirts are a living presence, one that evokes a sense of continuity and inspires pride in Blackfoot cultural heritage.

Reviews

“The book reveals the ways that collaboration is less about knowledge or culture in the abstract and more about bringing people, objects, and knowledge together into a meaningful social process of talking, thinking, sensing, and sharing while respecting cultural boundaries and flowing through the tensions, questions, and contradictions that often arise in such encounters.”

- Museum Anthropology Review

“Perhaps most importantly, Visiting with the Ancestors provides a helpful commentary on current and future practices that may help to breathe new life into discussions about reconciliation and museums.”

- Canada's History