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The word xutsten' 'marker' is clearly cognate with q'ulexutstun 'fence'. /q'ul-/ is the root meaning 'to go around/over something
K. Carlson, Albert McHalsie (2001)
A Stó:lō Coast Salish historical atlas
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Another 45 First Nations organizations representing other (non-Coast Salish) aboriginal communities in BC are also negotiating in the BC Treaty Process
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I have previously provided a more lengthy reflection of the intersubjective nature of this research
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I have heard of prominent travelling people who held several names concurrently, some having been granted to the individual by distant communities which they had visited or lived in
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A cartography of this kind was recently suggested by indigenous scholar Sonny McHalsie, who mapped his own genealogy over the Stó:lō landscape
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The Pawnee Ghost Dance Hand Game: Ghost Dance Revival and Ethnic Identity@@@Coast Salish Spirit Dancing: The Survival of an Ancestral ReligionAmerican Indian Quarterly, 5
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Coast Salish', pp. 341-50 for a more detailed discussion of the history of Coast Salish ethnographic mapping
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This article grapples with the seeming paradox in the notion of representing cartographic boundaries for an indigenous community whose core social relationships are embedded in a moral ethos of borderless kin networks. While ethnographic maps of the Coast Salish people (southwest British Columbia and northwest Washington) have traditionally represented territories as discretely bounded, continuous regions, contemporary land claims maps submitted by Coast Salish political leaders reveal a nest of overlapping and interlocking lines. The paper argues that delineating territories based strictly on land use and occupancy does not take into account broader relationships between people and place. Property, language, residence and identity are categories also appropriate to Coast Salish territorial boundaries, while ideas and practices of kin, travel, descent and sharing make boundaries permeable. The paper considers the boundary lines created by Coast Salish leaders within the context of land claims, which potentially, have the power to transform Coast Salish social and political relations.
Cultural Geographies – SAGE
Published: Apr 1, 2009
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