The trappers of Patuanak
Book 1980 Jarvenpa, Robert

ChipewyansNorth America > Arctic and Subarctic
In this work the author develops an analytical framework dealing with the spatial arrangement of human populations as a fundamental form of ecological adaptation to the natural environment. He...

Surviving marriage and marriage as survival in Chipewyan society
essay 1999 Jarvenpa, Robert

ChipewyansNorth America > Arctic and Subarctic
The major focus of this paper is on the institution of marriage which "…serves as a fundamental form of economic and social insurance for couples and their offspring and, indeed, for wider net...

The ubiquitous bushman
essay 1977 Jarvenpa, Robert

ChipewyansNorth America > Arctic and Subarctic
This article discusses the nature of Chipewyan-white trader relationships during the 1930s, with particular emphasis on local Indian interpretations of events. During the early 1930s and early...

Subarctic Indian trappers and band society
article 1977 Jarvenpa, Robert

ChipewyansNorth America > Arctic and Subarctic
The spatial organization of economic production in contemporary subarctic Indian society is illustrated by an analysis of geographical mobility and commercial fur trapping among the English Ri...

Recent ethnographic research
article 1979 Jarvenpa, Robert

ChipewyansNorth America > Arctic and Subarctic
This document reviews recent developments in the Upper Churchill River drainage area of northwestern Saskatchewan. "These include an analysis of the spatial organization of trapping economics,...

Symbolism and inter-ethnic relations among hunter-gatherers
article 1982 Jarvenpa, Robert

ChipewyansNorth America > Arctic and Subarctic
This is a study of the oral literature of the Patuanak Chipewyans obtained from the narrations of middle-aged and elderly males in the context of evening entertainment in trapping, hunting, an...

The development of pilgrimage in an inter-cultural frontier
book chapter 1990 Jarvenpa, Robert

ChipewyansNorth America > Arctic and Subarctic
The Patuanak pilgrimage, one among many annual festivals observed in the Upper Churchill River communities, serves the function of integrating people from an extensive region. Taking as an exa...

Ethnoarchaeology and gender
article 1995 Jarvenpa, Robert & Brumbach, Hetty Jo

ChipewyansNorth America > Arctic and Subarctic
In this essay Jaravenpa and Brumbach examine the role of gender in structuring subsistence activities among the Patuanak and Knee Lake Chipewyans of the Upper Churchill River area of Saskatche...

The microeconomics of southern Chipewyan fur trade history
essay 1984 Jarvenpa, Robert & Brumbach, Hetty Jo

ChipewyansNorth America > Arctic and Subarctic
This is a study of the rapidly changing material adaptations of the Chipewyan Indians in the late fur trade economy of north central Canada during the nineteenth and early twentieth centuries....

Socio-spatial organization and decision-making processes
article 1988 Jarvenpa, Robert & Brumbach, Hetty Jo

ChipewyansNorth America > Arctic and Subarctic
This article is broadly concerned with spatial or locational principles governing hunter-gatherer society. Toward this end, the settlement-community hierarchy of the southern chipewyan Indians...

Woman the hunter
essay 1997 Brumbach, Hetty Jo & Jarvenpa, Robert

ChipewyansNorth America > Arctic and Subarctic
Based on interviews, direct observations, and the interpretation of the archaeological record, this study presents an in-depth analysis of women as hunters in Chipewyan society. Contrary to th...

Ethnoarchaeology of subsistence space and gender
article 1997 Brumbach, Hetty Jo & Jarvenpa, Robert

ChipewyansNorth America > Arctic and Subarctic
This article discusses "…the relationship between a fundamental aspect of social life -- the cultural construction of gender -- and the spatial organization of hunting" (p. 414). Data for the ...

An ethnoarchaeological approach to Chipewyan adaptations in the late fur trade period
article 1982 Brumbach, Hetty Jo et al.

ChipewyansNorth America > Arctic and Subarctic
This document presents a research strategy for investigating the processes by which Chipewyan, Cree, Métis, and European populations have adapted to the natural environment, the Euro-Canadian ...