U središtu je razmatranja Englesko-eskimski i eskimsko-engleski rječnik English-Eskimo and Eskimo-English Vocabularies što ga je Središnji ured za tisak objavio 1890. godine u Washingtonu kako bi ...motivirao širi krug ljudi na učenje o Eskimima na Aljasci i tako im olakšao komunikaciju s njima, ali je prvotno sastavljen kao udžbenik za potrebe nastavnika u školama na Aljasci. Premda se navedeni izvor može analizirati s različitih stajališta, omogućujući pritom niz tumačenja, autorica u ovom radu posebno ističe ključne okolnosti iz kojih je isti proizišao i ujedno usmjerava pozornost znanstvenika na eskaleutske jezike.
Provider: - Institution: National Library of the Netherlands - Koninklijke Bibliotheek - Data provided by Europeana Collections- Liedregel index: Ziet gij die mensen stromen Kijk ze daar komen een ...wilde- Bronvermelding: Uit liedblad met broncode: Lbl KB Wouters 12105; p2, nummer 7.- Ziet gij die menschen stroomen / Kijk ze daar komen, een wilde troep (Ziet gij die mensen stromen / Kijk ze daar komen, een wilde troep). Aantal strofen: 2. Refrein: Aljaska het land der droomen / Aljaska dat bloed deed stroomen (v1-8) (Aljaska het land der dromen / Aljaska dat bloed deed stromen (v1-8)). Wijsaanduiding ontbreekt.- Met vermelding: ''Op muziek verkrijgbaar à 65 cent''. - Losstaand refrein.- Opmerking: Informatie voor dit record is overgenomen van referentielied Lbl Moormann K017a- All metadata published by Europeana are available free of restriction under the Creative Commons CC0 1.0 Universal Public Domain Dedication. However, Europeana requests that you actively acknowledge and give attribution to all metadata sources including Europeana
Provider: - Institution: National Library of the Netherlands - Koninklijke Bibliotheek - Data provided by Europeana Collections- Liedregel index: Ziet gij die mensen stromen Kijk ze daar komen een ...wilde- Bronvermelding: Uit liedblad met broncode: Lbl Meertens 54601; p2, nummer 7.- Ziet gij die menschen stroomen / Kijk ze daar komen, een wilde troep (Ziet gij die mensen stromen / Kijk ze daar komen, een wilde troep). Aantal strofen: 2. Refrein: Aljaska het land der droomen / Aljaska dat bloed deed stroomen (v1-8) (Aljaska het land der dromen / Aljaska dat bloed deed stromen (v1-8)). Wijsaanduiding ontbreekt.- Met vermelding: ''Op muziek verkrijgbaar à 65 cent''. - Losstaand refrein.- Opmerking: Informatie voor dit record is overgenomen van referentielied Lbl Moormann K017a- All metadata published by Europeana are available free of restriction under the Creative Commons CC0 1.0 Universal Public Domain Dedication. However, Europeana requests that you actively acknowledge and give attribution to all metadata sources including Europeana
Provider: - Institution: National Library of the Netherlands - Koninklijke Bibliotheek - Data provided by Europeana Collections- Liedregel index: Ziet gij die mensen stromen Kijk ze daar komen een ...wilde- Bronvermelding: Uit liedblad met broncode: Lbl Moormann K017; nummer 7.- Ziet gij die menschen stroomen / Kijk ze daar komen, een wilde troep (Ziet gij die mensen stromen / Kijk ze daar komen, een wilde troep). Aantal strofen: 2. Refrein: Aljaska het land der droomen / Aljaska dat bloed deed stroomen (v1-8) (Aljaska het land der dromen / Aljaska dat bloed deed stromen (v1-8)). Wijsaanduiding ontbreekt.- Met vermelding: ''Op muziek verkrijgbaar à 65 cent''. - Losstaand refrein.- Opmerking: Informatie voor dit record is overgenomen van referentielied Lbl Moormann K017a- All metadata published by Europeana are available free of restriction under the Creative Commons CC0 1.0 Universal Public Domain Dedication. However, Europeana requests that you actively acknowledge and give attribution to all metadata sources including Europeana
Provider: - Institution: National Library of the Netherlands - Koninklijke Bibliotheek - Data provided by Europeana Collections- Liedregel index: Ziet gij die mensen stromen Kijk ze daar komen een ...wilde- Bronvermelding: Uit liedblad met broncode: Lbl Moormann K017a; nummer 7.- Ziet gij die menschen stroomen / Kijk ze daar komen, een wilde troep (Ziet gij die mensen stromen / Kijk ze daar komen, een wilde troep). Aantal strofen: 2. Refrein: Aljaska het land der droomen / Aljaska dat bloed deed stroomen (v1-8) (Aljaska het land der dromen / Aljaska dat bloed deed stromen (v1-8)). Wijsaanduiding ontbreekt.- Met vermelding: ''Op muziek verkrijgbaar à 65 cent''. - Losstaand refrein.- Opmerking: Referentielied- All metadata published by Europeana are available free of restriction under the Creative Commons CC0 1.0 Universal Public Domain Dedication. However, Europeana requests that you actively acknowledge and give attribution to all metadata sources including Europeana
This book argues that two principal factors are inhibiting Native students from transitioning from school to college and from succeeding in their post-secondary studies. It presents models and ...examples of pathways to success that align with Native American students' aspirations and cultural values. Many attend schools that are poorly resourced where they are often discouraged from aspiring to college. Many are alienated from the educational system by a lack of culturally appropriate and meaningful environment or support systems that reflect Indigenous values of community, sharing, honoring extended family, giving-back to one's community, and respect for creation. The contributors to this book highlight Indigenized college access programs--meaning programs developed by, not just for--the Indigenous community, and are adapted, or developed, for the unique Indigenous populations they serve. Individual chapters cover a K-12 program to develop a Native college-going culture through community engagement; a "crash course" offered by a higher education institution to compensate for the lack of college counseling and academic advising at students' schools; the role of tribal colleges and universities; the recruitment and retention of Native American students in STEM and nursing programs; financial aid; educational leadership programs to prepare Native principals, superintendents, and other school leaders; and, finally, data regarding Native American college students with disabilities. The chapters are interspersed with narratives from current Indigenous graduate students. This is an invaluable resource for student affairs practitioners and higher education administrators wanting to understand and serve their Indigenous students.
In this third volume of Russian Colonization of Alaska ,
Andrei Val'terovich Grinëv examines the final period in the history
of Russian America, from naval officers' coming to power in the
colonies ...(1818) to the sale of Alaska to the United States (1867).
During this time, in addition to the extraction of furs, other
kinds of modern production continued to develop in Alaska,
including shipbuilding, cutting and mining of timber and coal, and
harvesting fish and ice for export. Grinëv's definitive volume
explores how certain economic successes could not prevent the
growth of crisis phenomena. Due to the low competitiveness of
products and the distributive nature of the economy, the Russian
colonial system could not compete with the dynamically developing
Anglo-American capitalist colonization. Russian Colonization of
Alaska is the first comprehensive study to analyze the origin
and evolution of Russian colonization based on research into
political economy, history, and ethnography. Grinëv's study
elaborates the social, political, spiritual, ideological, personal,
and psychological aspects of Russian America, and accounts for the
idiosyncrasies of the natural environment, competition from other
North American empires, Alaska Natives, and individual colonial
diplomats. The colonization of Alaska, rather than being simply a
continuation of the colonization of Siberia by Russians, was
instead part of overarching Russian and global history.
Black Lives in Alaska Hartman, Ian C; Reamer, David; Williams, Calvin E
2022, 2022-10-31
eBook
The history of Black Alaskans runs deep and spans generations. Decades before statehood and earlier even than the Klondike gold rush of the 1890s, Black men and women participated in Alaska's ...politics and culture. They hunted whales, patrolled the seas, built roads, served in the military, and opened businesses, even as they endured racism and fought injustices. Into the twentieth century, Alaska's Black residents were often part of the larger, nationwide freedom struggle. At the same time, Black settlers found themselves in a far different context than elsewhere in the United States, as Alaska's strategic military location, economic reliance on oil, and unique racial landscape influenced how Black Alaskans made a home for themselves in the northwesternmost corner of the country.Centering the agency and diversity of Black Alaskans, Black Lives in Alaska chronicles how Alaska's Black population, though small, has had an outsized impact on the culture and civic life of the region. Alaska's history of race relations and civil rights reminds the reader that the currents of discrimination and its responses-determination, activism, and perseverance-are American stories that might be explored in the unlikeliest of places.
Dark Traffic creates landmarks through language, by which
its speakers begin to describe traumas in order to survive and move
through them. With fine detail and observation, these poems work in
some ...way like poetic weirs: readers of Kane's work will see the
artic and subarctic, but also, more broadly, America, and the
exigencies of motherhood, indigenous experience, feminism, and
climate crises alongside the near-necropastoral of misogyny,
violence, and systemic failures. These contexts catch the voice of
the poems' speakers, and we perceive the currents they create.
In 1899, one of America's wealthiest men gathered together an interdisciplinary team of experts--many who would become legendary in their fields--to join him, entirely at his expense, on a voyage to ...the largely unknown territory of Alaska. The Harriman Expedition was, and remains to this day, unprecedented in its conception and execution. This book traces the story of the expedition: where they went, what they did, and what they learned--including finding early evidence of glacial retreat, assessing the nature and future of Alaska's natural resources, and making important scientific discoveries, including the accumulation of an astonishing collection of specimens. A second thread involves the lives and accomplishments of the members of the party: weaving multiple biographical strands into the narrative of the journey and the personal experiences that they shared in their odyssey in Alaskan waters. This is the first comprehensive, scholarly treatment of the Harriman Alaska Expedition since the 1980s. It features the diaries, letters home, and post-Expedition writings, including unpublished autobiographies, generated by the members of the party.