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A collaborative study of the Smithsonian Institutions ethnology collections has inspired the narration of Alaska Native oral traditions, including Yupik Elder Estelle Oozevaseuks re-telling (in 2001) of the story of Kukulek village and the St. Lawrence Island famine and epidemic of 1878–80. The loss of at least 1,000 lives and all but two of the islands villages was a devastating event that is well documented in historical sources and archaeology, as well as multiple Yupik accounts. Yupiget have transmitted memories of extreme weather, bad hunting conditions, and a wave of fatal contagion that swept the island. The Kukulek narrative, with origins traceable to the late nineteenth century, provides a spiritual perspective on the disasters underlying cause, found in the Kukulek peoples disrespect toward the animal beings that sustained them. This paper explores the cultural and historical contexts of this narrative, and contrasts it with Western perspectives.
Aron L. Crowell, Arctic Studies Center, Department of Anthropology, National Museum of Natural History, 121 W. 7th Ave., Anchorage, Alaska 99501
Estelle Oozevaseuk, General Delivery, Gambell, Alaska 99742
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