Review of <i> 'Pictures Bring Us Messages' / Sinaakssiiksi aohtsimaahpihkookiyaawa: Photographs and Histories from the Kainai Nation</i> by Alison K. Brown and Laura Peers with members of the Kainai Nation


Autoria(s): Berry, Susan
Data(s)

01/04/2007

Resumo

In August 1925, University of Oxford anthropologist Beatrice Blackwood spent two days on the Blood Reserve in southern Alberta, home to the Kainai Nation. Assisted by the Indian Agent, she toured the reserve and took 33 photographs. Blackwood was investigating potential links among "race," culture, and environment, and some of her photographs were anthropometric in nature. Others, showing men working in fields or girls at residential school, portrayed a culture in transition. Upon her return to Britain, Blackwood deposited the Kainai photographs with Oxford's Pitt Rivers Museum.

Formato

application/pdf

Identificador

http://digitalcommons.unl.edu/greatplainsresearch/891

http://digitalcommons.unl.edu/cgi/viewcontent.cgi?article=1865&context=greatplainsresearch

Publicador

DigitalCommons@University of Nebraska - Lincoln

Fonte

Great Plains Research: A Journal of Natural and Social Sciences

Palavras-Chave #Other International and Area Studies
Tipo

text