book chapter

The Chipewyan medicine fight in cultural and ecological perspective

culture and the anthropological tradition : essays in honor of robert f. spencerLanham, Md. • Published In 1990 • Pages: 153-175

By: Smith, David Merrill.

Abstract
In this paper, Smith discusses Chipewyan sorcery, or 'medicine fights' --the term he prefers--in context of a general Chipewyan understanding of power. The Chipewyans see all beings as repositories of power including animals. In fact animals are more powerful than humans, because they can survive without culture. The Chipewyan word for power is 'INKONZE,' meaning 'to know a little something.' Success is understood in terms of one's knowledge/power. Bad luck, i.e., the loss of power, is attributed to either a violation of a taboo or a jealous adversary. Smith recounts three stories of medicine fights in which envy is the prime motive between either a chief and his brother-in-law, or older and younger men. (Two other tales involve a bully and the misuse of INKONZE to kill animals.) According to Smith, the Chipewyan quest for power is a quest for control over the environment. Any social relation that undermines confidence in this quest is contested, even if the result is self-destructive.
Subjects
Verbal arts
Ethics
Sorcery
Sacred objects and places
Revelation and divination
culture
Chipewyans
HRAF PubDate
2000
Region
North America
Sub Region
Arctic and Subarctic
Document Type
book chapter
Evaluation
Creator Type
Ethnologist
Document Rating
4: Excellent Secondary Data
5: Excellent Primary Data
Analyst
Ian Skoggard ; 1999
Field Date
1968-1972
Coverage Date
not specified
Coverage Place
Great Slave Lake region, Northwest Territories, Canada
Notes
David M. Smith
Includes bibliographical references (p. 172-175)
LCCN
90033411
LCSH
Chipewyan Indians