Description
Book SynopsisAnna M. Kerttula, an anthropologist, offers a vivid portrayal of life in Sireniki, a Siberian village on the Bering Sea. Once a traditional Yup''ik community, it was by the final years of the Soviet Empire home to three cultural groups: the Yup''ik, native hunters of sea mammals; the Chukchi, nomadic reindeer herders who had been required by the state to turn their animals over to cooperative farms; and Russians of European ancestry enticed to the region by incentive programs designed to colonize the Russian Far East. Kerttula, who lived among the villagers for eighteen months, draws on her experiences to explore how each group''s beliefs and customs have transformed those of the other two. Her book shows the endurance of the indigenous cultures of Far Eastern Russia despite years of intrusion by the Soviet state.The author describes in rich detail how the Yup''ik, the Chukchi, and the Russian newcomers developed a sense of cultural difference because of their separate symbolic syst
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Anna M. Kerttula offers a vivid portrayal of life in Sireniki.
* Cultural Survival Quarterly *