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The Fishermen's Frontier - People and Salmon in Southeast Alaska (Paperback)
Loot Price: R914
Discovery Miles 9 140
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The Fishermen's Frontier - People and Salmon in Southeast Alaska (Paperback)
Series: Weyerhaeuser Environmental Books
Expected to ship within 10 - 15 working days
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In The Fishermen's Frontier, David Arnold examines the economic,
social, cultural, and political context in which salmon have been
harvested in southeast Alaska over the past 250 years. He starts
with the aboriginal fishery, in which Native fishers lived in close
connection with salmon ecosystems and developed rituals and
lifeways that reflected their intimacy. The transformation of the
salmon fishery in southeastern Alaska from an aboriginal resource
to an industrial commodity has been fraught with historical
ironies. Tribal peoples -- usually considered egalitarian and
communal in nature -- managed their fisheries with a strict notion
of property rights, while Euro-Americans -- so vested in the notion
of property and ownership -- established a common-property fishery
when they arrived in the late nineteenth century. In the twentieth
century, federal conservation officials tried to rationalize the
fishery by "improving" upon nature and promoting economic
efficiency, but their uncritical embrace of scientific planning and
their disregard for local knowledge degraded salmon habitat and
encouraged a backlash from small-boat fishermen, who clung to their
"irrational" ways. Meanwhile, Indian and white commercial fishermen
engaged in identical labors, but established vastly different work
cultures and identities based on competing notions of work and
nature. Arnold concludes with a sobering analysis of the threats to
present-day fishing cultures by forces beyond their control.
However, the salmon fishery in southeastern Alaska is still very
much alive, entangling salmon, fishermen, industrialists,
scientists, and consumers in a living web of biological and human
activity that has continued for thousands of years.
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