Please use this identifier to cite or link to this item:
http://hdl.handle.net/11375/23915
Title: | Dreaming of Animals: The Waswanipi Cree Shaking Tent Ceremony in Relation to Environment, Hunting and Missionization. |
Authors: | Feit, Harvey A. |
Department: | Anthropology |
Keywords: | Shaking Tent Ceremony;Everyday Life;Continuity and Change;Hunting;Environmental Change;Missionization;Historical Perspectives |
Publication Date: | 1994 |
Publisher: | University of Tokyo Press |
Citation: | Feit, Harvey A. 1994. “Dreaming of Animals: The Waswanipi Cree Shaking Tent Ceremony in Relation to Environment, Hunting and Missionization.” In Circumpolar Religion and Ecology: An Anthropology of the North. Takashi Irimoto and Takako Yamada, eds. Tokyo: University of Tokyo Press. Pp. 289-316. |
Abstract: | The distinct religious practices and knowledge of shaking tent ceremonies have not disappeared with the adoption by many Waswanipi Cree of Christianity and a less isolated way of life, nor have the ceremonies remained unchanged. I explore the changes and continuities in the religious ceremonies and knowledge among two generations of Waswanipi Cree from the James Bay region of northern Quebec. The focus is on the possible reasons for a reported decrease in the frequency of occurrences of the ceremony from the early decades of the 20th century to mid-century. Less frequent occurrence of the shaking tent was taken by some observers as a sign of the demise of Cree religious practice and knowledge. I believe, however, that the change was part of Cree choices that explored variations on Cree religious practices, rather than a radical break with tradition. I concentrate on the period from 1925 to 1970 in order to show that these changes in ceremonial occurrences were closely related to environmental changes, and Cree social decisions and choices about the kind of way of life they wanted to continue. This is explored by considering the way in which the shaking tent ceremony was viewed by a significant number of Cree elders of different ages in 1968-70, and how it was valued by them even though all but a few them came to chose not to do ceremonies themselves. |
Description: | The recording of a 1969 shaking tent ceremony in the Waswanipi region was a joint project with the family of the Late Andrew, Joseph, Jr. and Eva Ottereyes. Our work together on this and other projects extended over the following five decades. It was an extraordinary gift for me to have been a part of it. Each of us envisaged reasons for recording the ceremony, for some it was for younger family members, for some for future generations of Cree, for some for the value of the knowledge for wider audiences. This article was a part of that process. In addition to the Ottereyes family, publishing about the ceremony in 1994 and 1997 became a continuing occasion to learn from the comments of other Waswanipi Cree people, among whom I want to specially acknowledge Diane Ottereyes Reid, Hattie Kitchen, and Kevin Brousseau. From what they shared with me I would not now use terms like ‘performance,’ ‘performer’ and ‘audience,’ among others in the article, because of the ambiguities or errors those terms convey in English. I am also aware now that the English text of the ceremony which I quote occasionally here is not the same as a linguists’ transcription-translation, but more an English translation-paraphrasing-commentary on the often difficult and sometimes undecipherable Cree text. I also want to also acknowledge valuable discussions about ceremonies with Richard J. Preston, Colin H. Scott, and Brian Craik. |
URI: | http://hdl.handle.net/11375/23915 |
ISBN: | 0-86068-515-5 |
Appears in Collections: | Anthropology Publications |
Files in This Item:
File | Description | Size | Format | |
---|---|---|---|---|
FEIT_Dreaming_Animals_Shaking_Tent-Irimoto_ed_1994.pdf | 625.06 kB | Adobe PDF | View/Open |
Items in MacSphere are protected by copyright, with all rights reserved, unless otherwise indicated.