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Iñupiaq Ethnohistory

  • Selected Essays

  • by Ernest S. Burch Jr. and Erica Hill (editor)
University Press of Colorado - Iñupiaq Ethnohistory
  • Paperback Price: $38.95

It took more than a century for colonialism to reach Alaska after the first Europeans set foot in what would become the continental United States. For the Iñupiaq settled at the very top of the world, their complex society remained unknown and undisturbed longer than many other Native tribes in America. Ernest S. Burch, Jr., dedicated most of his life and career to understanding this precolonial period and the lives of the Natives of Northwest Alaska. Iñupiaq Ethnohistory finally collects in one place Burch’s critical research in this area, bringing to light work that had once been buried in scholarly books or scattered across journals. It is a fascinating and accessible window into a now-vanished world.

  • Erica Hill

    Erica Hill is an archaeologist working on the prehistory of the Bering Sea region. She teaches at the University of Alaska Southeast in Juneau.


    Ernest S. Burch Jr

    Ernest S. “Tiger” Burch, Jr. was a social anthropologist specializing in the early historical social organization of Eskimo peoples. He was an advisor to the US Arctic Research Commission and a member of the National Academy of Sciences’ National Research Council.

  • Paperback ISBN: 978-1-60223-214-3
  • Publication Month: November
  • Publication Year: 2013
  • Pages: 280
  • Discount Type: Short
  • ECommerce Code: 9781602232143
  • Member Institution Access : Mountain Scholar

University Press of Colorado University of Alaska Press Utah State University Press University of Wyoming Press