PT - JOURNAL ARTICLE AU - Ezra B. W. Zubrow TI - Matthias, Pepys, Longfellow, Sissy Spacek, and Me: Arctic Cultural Dissemination across Time and Space AID - 10.1353/arc.2011.0113 DP - 2011 Feb 06 TA - Arctic Anthropology PG - 1--14 VI - 48 IP - 1 4099 - http://aa.uwpress.org/content/48/1/1.short 4100 - http://aa.uwpress.org/content/48/1/1.full SO - Arctic Anthropol2011 Feb 06; 48 AB - Imagine a corked bottle with a message in it floating south on currents of the Arctic Ocean. The bottle is picked up, the message read, the bottle re-corked and put back in the water. Similarly, there are fragments of a culture that float across time and space and are incorporated into a variety of societies. This is the narrative of a fragment of Lapp culture first recorded in the 1670s that drifted through a variety of European cultures and eventually became a well-known part of Anglo-American society; its origin is generally unknown. The story of “A Boy’s Will” shows how resilient some thoughts, words, and ideas are as they drift through time, space, and culture.