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It was revelatory to me when I learned of the importance of culture. As a child I was raised in a community of half American families that had come to enjoy the natural wild resources of SE Alaska, that therefore had no roots, no depth of acculturation save that generally of America, a fierce devotion to personal and community liberty, which I embody whole-heartedly not only by virtue of acculturation, but my personal character which I was born with. The other half of the population had primeval roots in Sitka, which meant 'The Place' in Tlingit. This was their capitol, the heart of the roots of their people, and the cumulative research of human evolution I have undertaken all my life suggests a deep prehistoric continuous occupation of Sitka by the Tlingit that at least began as soon as the glaciers receded >10kya. They had a mythos involving all the features of the region, all their families were associated with the ecological aspects that mattered most to people. Wolf, Orca, Salmon, Raven, Eagle, and, oddly, Frog. Complex rules of inheritance and mandatory intermarriage between clans factored heavily in their lives, and their holidays reflected the events in the wildlife they considered important, the return of salmon to the rivers, the spring and fall migrations of the frogs, and so on.
This wasn't remarked on by me as a youth. I hunted and fished, foraged and manufactured tools at appropriate times, along with everyone else. The seasons ruled the lives of men, naturally. But when, as an adult, I furnished a home, I realized something I had not remarked on before, considering a chair just in terms of it's function, as a thing to sit on. A simple chair reflects millennia of culture. The astounding variety of chairs reflect the diversity of human purposes to which chairs are put. We sit on them for similarly diverse reasons, to take off muddy boots, to verbally joust with political rivals in parlors, to eat workman's dinners, or to show our etiquette at formal affairs, and chairs embody these cultural complexities in their manner of construction and materials.
I hadn't thought of that at all until I needed chairs for my home, and then the variety of options took me aback in my quest. An overstuffed leather battleship armchair for lounging and verbally jousting in parlors was a ridiculous choice for a mudroom, and the spare wooden perch suitable for the mudroom unsuitable for the living room, or for the dining table, where the comfort and appointments requisite to a chair were midway between what was suitable to the mudroom and what suited the parlor. I only had room in my first apartments for three kinds of chairs, in the aforementioned roles, and had an enormous variety of chairs to exclude, because some chairs for formal dining cost literally $T's, and these weren't fit for purpose for me, nor I for them, honestly.
Our cultures are reflected not just in our names, but in our tools, our places, and even in our chairs.
Thanks!
I'd like to first drop this link, which i'm sure i've dropped before...
https://randomwire.com/wabi-sabi/
Thank you for the reminder that our cultures live on in the things we create out of such a culture...tools, homes, communities. I am beginning to understand how we all come full circle in the end.
I don't know anything about the Tlingit peoples or their culture. So are you part Tlingit or were you born full American, but raised with these good folk? What was live like in your era in Alaska? The only thing i know of Alaska is it's cold...and that some guy a few years ago was breaking bones for bone marrow...
This might not even be Alaska...i must now confess...i havent truly looked at the American map in 10 years. Don't ask me where NY is i have no clue! I'm getting back into my geography!
You know the Japanese have the same mindset when crafting Katanas. The spirit of Japan is embodied within the blade. Your reflection on chairs reminded me of this. I now cast my mind's thought-cabinet filing system and now understand why craftsmanship was much honoured in the years past. Artisans will always have a place in society because they have a heavy duty of passing on the relics of the old world, with old world memories and feelings, by the creation of their own hands. That's a beautiful thing!
I use materials as I am provided them, or can provide (donate) them, for jobs. I was told by a woman who had been raised in Hawaii, apparently around the sizable population of Japanese heritage there, that my work embodied wabisabi. Often I repurpose materials for folks that need something but have no ability to provide the necessary materials, so I use whatever I can scrounge that can be made to work. I assumed wabisabi was an aesthetic, which apparently is part of what it is, because of the rustic look repurposed materials create. I am quite surprised to learn there is a moral precept codified in the concept. Wabisabi is much more than I thought it was.
That guy says he's in the Brooks mountain range, which is in Alaska, but ~2000 miles north of Sitka, where I grew up amongst the Tlingit. Alaska is very big. Texans think Texas is big, but when an Alaskan saw a Texan carrying some watermelons, he asked him where he got such nice grapes.
I am not part Tlingit, but do have some Chippewa ancestry, and interestingly the Chippewa are part of a larger group of Native Americans (the Anishinaabeg) that includes the Ojibwa and Cree whom, like the Tlingit, have been found to have Denisovan admixture. I only learned this just today and just now realized that this shared genetic heritage results in I and the Tlingit being very distantly related - through hybridization with another human species (Although, perhaps tens of millennia ago. If you go back far enough, we're all brothers). I spent hours researching as a result of that question, and will have to make a post of it, because it's a ridiculous answer to your innocent question!
As are scholars that pass down ancient knowledge of interpreting the world through trigrams and hexagrams. Very little of the ways of our ancestors, perhaps predating the Bronze age, is known to us today. The Zhou Yi is a rare treasure, and you are it's guardian.
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