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The living tradition of Yup'ik masks : agayuliyararput = our way of making prayer
Title:
The living tradition of Yup'ik masks : agayuliyararput = our way of making prayer
JLCTITLE245:
Ann Fienup-Riordan ; translations by Marie Meade ; photography by Barry McWayne.
Personal Author:
Edition:
First ed.
Publication Information:
Seattle : University of Washington Press, 1996.
Physical Description:
320 pages : illustrations (some color) ; 31 cm
ISBN:
9780295975016

9780295975238
General Note:
"In association with the Anchorage Museum of History and Art and the Anchorage Museum Association."

Published in conjunction with an exhibit organized by the Anchorage Museum of History and Art.
Abstract:
For the Yup'ik people of southwestern Alaska, masked dancing has long been a focal point of ceremonial activity. Performed traditionally inside the qasaiq (communal men's house) during festivals, the dances feature face and finger masks that make visible the world of helping spirits and extraordinary beings, and are specially made to tell particular stories. Although masks are infrequently used today, elders still remember their powerful presence and increasingly appreciate them as touchstones of cultural pride - as agayuliyararput, "our way of making prayer." Often used by shamans to facilitate communication and movement between worlds (human and animal, the living and the dead), Yup'ik masks usually were discarded after use. Specimens first found their way into museum collections via nineteenth-century traders and collectors working along the Yukon and Kuskokwim rivers, and soon were displayed internationally. The Living Tradition of Yup'ik Masks brings together masks from museum and private collections all over the world and presents them in their native context. Ann Fienup Riordan describes the natural world of southwestern Alaska and the rich ceremonial life that evolved there to acknowledge and honor the many beings that made possible the sustenance of human life in a precariously balanced environment. Chapters arranged geographically describe the world's major Yup'ik mask collectors and collections and the circumstances that made each unique. The voices of Yup'ik elders are present throughout the text, recounting stories, describing traditional Yup'ik life, and responding to particular masks.
Local Note:
UAS Egan Library has six colored posters shelved with this title.
Bibliography Note:
Includes bibliographical references (pages 309-314) and index.
Added Corporate Author:
Personal Name:
Jean Blodgett Donor
Citation Reference Notes:
Book review by Dorothy Jean Ray, in American Indian art magazine, 0192-9968, Vol. 22, no. 3 (summer 1997), p. 100-101
Contents:
Yup'ik Contributors -- Introduction: Our Way of Making an Exhibit -- Masks' History -- Yup'ik People of Western Alaska -- Masks in Museums: Collecting the Past for the Future -- Masks' Meaning -- Making the Unseen Seen -- Masks and the Stories They Tell -- In the Qasgiq -- Suppression and Revival of Masked Dancing -- Making a Mask -- Human Senses in Yup'ik Iconography and Oral Tradition -- Dance and Song: The Body and Breath of the Mask -- Collectors and Collections: New Stories for Old Masks -- Collectors Come to the Yukon -- Kuskowim Collections and Collecting -- Masks and Masked Dancing at Hooper Bay and Qissunaq.
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