Deschutes Public Library

Totem poles, Aldona Jonaitis

Label
Totem poles, Aldona Jonaitis
Language
eng
Literary Form
non fiction
Main title
Totem poles
Nature of contents
catalogs
resource.otherEventInformation
Online presentation by Deschutes Public Library on November 30, 2021
Responsibility statement
Aldona Jonaitis
Series statement
DPL YouTube, Nov 2021
Summary
Destroyed, stolen, and appropriated through colonization, hear how 20th century Northwest Coast Indigenous people are now reappropriating their artistry into symbols of Native sovereignty. The totem pole represents an ironic twist to the history of late 19th and early 20th century colonialism in southeast Alaska and coastal British Columbia. As missionaries and government officials tried to destroy Indigenous cultures, and settlers treated those whose lands they stole with appalling racism, the most famous Northwest Coast artistic creation, the totem pole, became increasingly valuable to non-Natives as the last remnants of "disappearing Indians." Museum collectors acquired poles from coastal villages, sometimes paying their owners, sometimes stealing them outright. Tourists on the Inside Passage "Totem Pole Route" flocked to remote communities to see poles in situ. Model totem poles became cherished souvenirs. Fictions about the meaning and purpose of poles flourished. Totem poles became separated from those who made them. Of course the Northwest Coast Indigenous people did not disappear, and in the 21st century Northwest Coast people have reappropriated their totem poles and transformed them into key symbols of Native sovereignty