Springtime in n’Daki Menan, the homeland of the Teme-Augama Anishnabai [electronic resource] : by Alexandra Kahsenniio Nahwegahbow babies, cradleboards and community wrapping

By: Nahwegahbow, Alexandra KahsenniioMaterial type: TextTextPublication details: Ottawa, Ont. : Carleton University, 2013Description: 1 online resource (vii, 160 p.) : digital, PDF fileSubject(s): Cradleboards | Parenting | AnishinaabeOnline resources: Full text Dissertation note: Thesis (M.A.)--Carleton University, 2013. Abstract: This is a study of how the tikinaagan (cradleboard) as an object related to pre-colonial Indigenous childcare can be metaphorically investigated as a model for traditional social frameworks that illustrate the central place and role of babies and young people within Anishinaabe families and communities. Through this, I approach the ornamentation and arrangement of a small cradleboard collected by Frank Speck in the early-twentieth century during his visit to the territory of n'Daki Menan in northeastern Ontario. By exploring the historical context in which this cradleboard was created, used, and collected I address the gaps in the early literature where the Indigenous voice and value placed on these objects were disregarded or overlooked. I argue that cradleboards, through their stylistic design and contextual power, have the ability to communicate traditional knowledge and values of parenting, family and community across generations to present day.
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Thesis (M.A.)--Carleton University, 2013.

This is a study of how the tikinaagan (cradleboard) as an object related to pre-colonial Indigenous childcare can be metaphorically investigated as a model for traditional social frameworks that illustrate the central place and role of babies and young people within Anishinaabe families and communities. Through this, I approach the ornamentation and arrangement of a small cradleboard collected by Frank Speck in the early-twentieth century during his visit to the territory of n'Daki Menan in northeastern Ontario. By exploring the historical context in which this cradleboard was created, used, and collected I address the gaps in the early literature where the Indigenous voice and value placed on these objects were disregarded or overlooked. I argue that cradleboards, through their stylistic design and contextual power, have the ability to communicate traditional knowledge and values of parenting, family and community across generations to present day.

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