Industrial development in the north has disrupted the environment and
Indigenous livelihoods. Memory and Landscape explores how Indigenous
peoples in the Arctic are adapting to such rapid change. In this
beautifully illustrated volume, Indigenous and non-Indigenous
contributors use oral history and scholarly research from disciplines
such as linguistics, archaeology, and ethnohistory to reveal the complex
ways communities in the north--Alaska, Canada, Greenland, and
Siberia--strengthen their identities in the face of cultural disruption.
The authors demonstrate why the resilience of Indigenous memory, marked
in the land by place names and stories, must form the bedrock of Arctic
studies.