Puffer's Pond. Image Courtesy of University of Massachusetts Amherst. |
University of Massachusetts Amherst has written an interesting article about Anishinaabemowin language students' efforts, with the help of their professors Howard Kimewon and Sonya Atalay, to build a working wiigwas jiiman (birchbark canoe).
"Immersion in a canoe-building project is an innovative way to highlight the importance of water in the Anishinaabe language and culture indigenous to the Great Lakes region. For instance, in Anishinaabemowin, notkwemahza is a verb that means “he or she passes by in a canoe, singing a love song to [their]sweetheart”—one word that all by itself manages to convey motion, presence in a vehicle, two actions, mood, and a subject-object relationship."
To read the full article, click here.
For more information,
Visit:
- Video: Building Canoes and Language Skills
- University of Massachusetts Amherst, January 13, 2015.
- Video: UMass Amherst Ojibwe Language Students Build Birchbark Canoe
- Indian Country Today, June 7, 2015.
- Wikwemikong Unceded Indian Reserve, Canada
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- July 29, 2014
- UMass Amherst Anthropologist Receives Mellon Fellowship Award to Study Endangered Language and Native American Traditions
- December 12, 2014.
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