Wednesday, March 31, 2021

selling and buying

 Approximately a year after we got our septic tank replaced and Neighbour had inquired about our plans, we had decided we wanted to move on. Bill had grown tired of the oral history job—not the work itself, but the uses to which it was put. Both of us saw potential in bringing the kind of work he was doing to a wider audience. He was combining interviews with photos and scanned documents into a computer program that could be viewed like a website, but offline. The way these were structured at work was for the benefit mostly of researchers, which was valuable, but not how we would do it for people who wanted to document the life of their grandma, for example. We did a test project with the local quilt guild, which was fun for us and them and quite fascinating. They loved the end result, which was promising. We wanted to pursue this idea, but for various reasons, the university was an obstacle, particularly when it came to funding community projects. Also, I’d joined an online writing community and had gotten inquiries about being brought to local writing groups as a speaker, but the cost of my travel would have been prohibitive for them. We decided that staying would place us in a kind of a holding pattern. Since Daughter had graduated from high school and was moving away herself, everything seemed to point us in a new direction. 

We dithered about timing, but finally made a decision to call Neighbour on a particular weekend, since we’d promised to let them know when we were ready to sell. That Saturday, the phone rang. Imagine my shock when it was Neighbour asking us again about selling. I told him, ‘You won’t believe this, but we were planning to call you tomorrow!’ He went on to say that he was in Tennessee at his parents’ home. He wanted the house for them. They had no other family, were elderly, and had just gotten scammed. He’d been trying to get them to move to Fairbanks for years and they’d always refused—until that weekend. They were ready to head north. Neighbour said he and his wife would be over when they got back home later in the week. We sort of walked around in a daze, marvelling at how things were unfolding.

The neighbours came over to look around the house. I kept pointing out all the things that were wrong or would need work. He kept repeating, ‘This place has great chi.’ I laughed and commented that we were each taking on the wrong role. I was supposed to be gushing about how great the place was while he pointed out the many problems. He made an offer for a cash sale. We accepted it. That was that.



We started preparing for a major move, for ourselves and Daughter. Bill quit his job and they had a farewell party for us. I’m not sure why or how we decided we’d check out Down East Maine, but we booked a flight to Bangor and headed for Ellsworth. We talked to a realtor about what was available. It quickly became apparent that nothing there would suit, so we just enjoyed the rest of our trip and went back to Fairbanks. With about a week left until we had to vacate so remodelling could begin to make the house more comfortable for Neighbour’s elderly parents. We arrived home in the middle of the night and Daughter was flying out later that day. We got some of her boxes mailed off to her new address and then drove down to North Pole, a town 20 miles south of Fairbanks, to look at a cabin that was for sale. We’d picked up one of those real estate booklets that they had at the time and found it in there. It looked promising, so Bill called the realtor and set up an appointment for a viewing the next day. Later that evening, we drove our daughter to the airport and said a tearful good-bye. Then we went home and crawled into bed.

The next day, we viewed the cabin and said we wanted to buy it (it was another owner contract, so we didn’t have to deal with a bank). We went back to the realtor’s office and explained our situation, saying we’d need to move in the following week. He was surprised, but he said he thought he could make it happen. He did. So a week after we got back from Maine, a little disappointed but open to whatever was coming next, we moved into our new home. It was a holiday weekend and we’d rented a U-Haul. It broke down in front of the cabin. The office where Bill had rented it was closed early for the holiday, so he had to call the national number. A flatbed truck was sent to haul it away. Our truck was at the office, so Bill called someone to pick him up and bring him to the truck. I hauled some boxes until he got back, then we went back to Fairbanks for one more night, bringing the dogs and cats to their new home the following day. We were exhausted, but got settled into life in North Pole. When Neighbour’s parents moved in, they invited us to visit them. They were lovely people and we became friends, visiting them regularly. 

Bill got his old job back and we tried to decide what the next plan would be. One day at work, someone came in for something and mentioned that he’d gotten Irish citizenship because his grandparents were born in Ireland. Bill’s ears perked up and he started asking questions. When he got home, he looked into it further, saw that he qualified, and started gathering the required documents. I am writing this today in my home in rural Ireland partly as a result of us not going to Down East Maine, but going to North Pole instead, and Bill returning to his old job. And we weren’t done with Maine, yet, either, although that was almost a decade in the future. 

Tuesday, March 30, 2021

issues and the septic tank

 After leaving academia, I took some time to pursue other interests. I was particularly happy to have so much more time to be creative and pursue my passion for fibre arts and doing my own reading about the history of knitting, embroidery, crocheting, etc in women’s lives. I joined the local needlework guild, where I learned new techniques. I taught myself needle tatting—a skill that would be useful in a practical way a few years later when I was hired to teach this and other skills at a local yarn shop. I was having to adjust to a new sort of life, which was sometimes difficult, but I was glad to be out of academia. However, after a year or two, when it was suggested to me that I start an interdisciplinary PhD course of study with a focus on language preservation, I allowed myself to be talked into it, against my better judgement and in spite of my misgivings. I was also offered a job in the Alaska Native Language Center (ANLC), which I accepted.

This all turned out to be a mistake, of course, for a few reasons. Some of the same old stuff would turn out to be an issue again as far as the Native-White tension goes. One day, I had a frank discussion with a younger faculty member in ANLC, who had brought in close to a million dollars in grant money. Under normal circumstances, this would have provided him with a secure track to tenure, but in this case, because he was a White guy, he was not even on that track. He finally had to apply for a position in the education department as a threat to ANLC before they relented and put him on the tenure track. ANLC had a bunch of White guys as senior faculty, but they were trying to get more Native people in there. This was a commendable goal, but was often counterproductive. In the case of my teacher, for instance, she was not given proper teacher training and did not know how to proceed. Students dropped away after the first year.  That wasn’t the only problem, however.

In this new program, which I was building from scratch, I would be working with her again, but long fieldwork trips to Village would not be required—we could work together in Fairbanks. But then she got arrested again. She and her husband had started drinking again during their first year in Fairbanks. He stopped, but she had difficulty controlling her drinking. As someone who used to have the same problem, I understood this and had some empathy. She’d gotten arrested for driving under the influence a few years before and had continued to get caught violating her probation. So it was again. At a committee meeting, where we were discussing how I should proceed under the circumstances, one of the members suggested I could work with her in the jail. I wondered what the hell I was doing. 

In the end, it didn’t matter. I was gaining a deeper understanding of my mistake when one day at work, when she was out of jail and back in the office, she called me over. I went in and wondered what that smell was. She reached around into a bookcase, pulled out a plastic cup, and took a long drink, before telling me that she’d just learned her contract would not be renewed when it was up, so she wouldn’t be back. I knew I was done with academic life.

I stayed at the job, though, as the pay check came in handy. Bill was continuing his work in Oral History and the Film Archives and we were starting to develop ideas for future projects of our own. In the meantime, we needed to have our septic tank replaced. We didn’t know it at the time, but this would be the start of a new chapter of our lives. As the work was being done, our nearest neighbour came walking over to chat with Bill, asking him what was going on. Bill told him and Neighbour asked whether we were moving. Bill said we weren’t then, but it was possible that in another year or so we might be. Neighbour said that if we ever wanted to sell, to call him first before placing the house on the market. Bill said we would do that. 

I left the job at ANLC when one day, my pay check was not in the pile. When the admin person inquired about this, she found out that someone had not submitted the proper paperwork or something. I was told not to worry—it would show up eventually. Indeed. I told them they could combine it with my last check, because I was done.





Monday, March 29, 2021

trapped in the bentley mall

One night at a meeting of the Fairbanks Needlework Guild, a woman sat down next to me, nodded towards another woman across the room, and said, ‘She told me to talk to you.’ As I asked her what she wanted to talk to me about, I was curious about what her answer would be. She proceeded to talk about a black cat, less than a year old, named Bentley. He was given that name because he was found as quite a young kitten stuck in the door of the Michaels craft store in the Bentley Mall (the northernmost mall in North America). When rescued, he had leg injuries so needed to have some surgery. His leg was saved and he could use it, but it was bent in a funny direction (another tie-in with his name!) and he limped a little. Nonetheless, he had recovered well and his injury didn’t impede his movement in any way as he grew. The problem was, this woman’s daughter turned out to be allergic and they needed a new home for the little guy. I was apparently seen as an easy mark, so she was pointed in my direction.

I told her I’d talk to Bill about it and when I got home, that’s the first thing I did. He was not hostile to the idea, but he wasn’t overly enthusiastic, either. We’d just adopted white rescue cat named Frosty from the Humane Society (we quickly renamed him J. Frost E.). We weren’t sure about introducing another cat into the house so soon, but Bill emailed the woman and asked a few questions. After she’d answered, we talked about it and agreed that we’d bring Bentley home. We needn’t have worried, because J and Bentley became friends very quickly. Bentley came with a feather duster, because he loved it, we were told. He was uninterested in it when he came to our house, but J loved it! He would flop onto his back, holding the feather duster with his front paws, then bite it and start to attack it with his back paws. It was funny. Bentley, although younger than J, was kind of mellow. It all worked out beautifully and we were glad that we’d agreed to become Bentley’s people. 

Friday, March 26, 2021

combat fishing

can be a very frustrating way to fish.  People get tangled up with their lines every now and then.  Others move around to find a better spot.  Needless to say, it is a very popular sport in the summer months.  





Thursday, March 25, 2021

Wednesday, March 24, 2021

fishing community

Ken's Alaskan Tackle has been open for over 35 years providing the community with a go to tackle store that carries everything you need for fishing.  We stopped to get some fishing supplies because our friend wanted to fish for salmon.



Tuesday, March 23, 2021

Denali National Park

 we drove to Denali which was about an hor drive from our house.  We were going to take a bus tour with our foreign exchange student and her dad, who was visiting from Norway.  I have a few images from that bus ride. 

I always liked the signs that tell you how far certain places are


photo taken from the parking lot.


once on the bus, you can get off anywhere and just flag another bus.  We had stopped at the place below for a break.  Some people took a walk and didn't come back on the bus.  You don't have to ride the same bus to return.


the only bear we saw, photo taken from the bus




Monday, March 22, 2021

murphy dome

Murphy Dome is now a recreational site most popular with ATV riders and hikers. It lies about twenty miles outside of the Fairbanks, most of which are traveled on Murphy Dome Road off of Sheep Creek Road which can be accessed from the UAF campus. Murphy Dome Road turns to packed dirt and gravel just past Cache Creek Trail. The average car can still make the drive, but obey the speed limit and watch for potholes, road debris, and frost heaves on the way.

You’ll enjoy scenic vistas as you wind through lowland forest and climb up toward the Dome, with views opening up over the valley. The road curves around the outer rim of the dome toward the end with pullouts for photos or a brief stop. It’s a good idea to use your flashers, as the dust kicked up from the road can make it hard to see a stopped vehicle. At the top, park in the dirt and gravel lot in the center of the Dome. On one end stands a communications tower and on the other, the last operational remnant from the Air Force Base. ATV trails are scattered throughout, and also work for a quick day hike if you feel like stretching your legs.  Also a great place to pick blueberries.

This Dome is a popular place to watch sunsets in the summer and fall, or to observe the northern lights in winter. Mosquitos come in droves here during the summer, so bring your bug spray.

Info courtesy of alaska.org








Thursday, March 18, 2021

getting ready

getting the dogs ready to race.  It took a few hours to get everyone organized and ready to go.

 



Wednesday, March 17, 2021

dog transport

each dog has its own section in these trucks.  I thought it was pretty cramped but the dogs weren't big and probably were used to it.  They seemed anxious to get out and run once they arrived.  





Thursday, March 11, 2021

hot licks ice cream

on a cold day.  Their ice cream is homemade and there is a huge line in warmer weather.  No waiting in the winter though. :)  You can visit their website Hot Licks



Tuesday, March 9, 2021

the uaf library


The Elmer E. Rasmuson Library (often referred to as Rasmuson Library) is the largest research library in the U.S. state of Alaska, housing just over one million volumes. Located on the University of Alaska Fairbanks campus, it is named in honor of Elmer E. Rasmuson, who served on the University of Alaska Board of Regents from 1950 to 1969 and was the board chair from 1956 to 1968. He was a major supporter of expanding the library and moving it to its present location.  (Wikipedia)

UAF Film Archives
When you enter the library, you are on the fourth floor.  There are two floors above it and three below it.  I worked on the third floor in Oral History and on the second floor in the Film Archives.  I always thought it was weird going to work at 8 in the morning when it was dark and leaving around 2ish and it was dark again.  So I used to wear my sunglasses to make my mind think it was light out. :)  Of course when I opened the door it was dark.

The library always had some issues to deal with and they were placed in the deferred maintenance section of the budget which meant it wouldn't be addressed anytime soon.  At one point, they decided they had to do something about the flooding problem. Because some of the library was below ground level, this was a major problem. Offices and departments had to be moved to higher floors. Books and documents had to be shelved elsewhere. Work commenced and went on for months. About a million dollars later, people and books moved back. And the following spring, there was a flooding problem once again.



Monday, March 8, 2021

decision time

 sunset taken from the university.


After my attempts at working in Village failed, and I decided it was not worth spending any more of my life on, I headed in a different direction. I faced some pushback from my committee chair, but had support from another committee member, who told me that if necessary, he would take over as chair, but politically it would be better for the current chair to remain, so he and his wife, also a committee member, would work together to steer the next meeting in the way I wanted it to go. They did and I was able to proceed. 

Things did not run smoothly, though. I faced pushback along with some crazy behaviour on the part of supposedly mature tenured professors. I was finding satisfaction in teaching, and I felt I was good at this (my course evaluations backed this up), but other aspects of academic life were becoming less and less satisfactory and teaching is the least valued part of what is required. The thing is, I really should have known well before then. Well, the truth is, I did know, but I tried to rationalize this knowledge away.

When we went to Fairbanks to look for a place to live, the semester was over, but I called in at my new department anyway, and introduced myself to the two admin women in the office, one of whom gave me a tour. My heart felt increasingly heavy, and when we went back to the rental car, I got in and burst into tears, much to Bill’s surprise and dismay! ‘It’s horrible!’ I spluttered through my tears. He kept trying to assure me that it was just because it was new and it’d be better once I got used to it. Time would prove me right in the end. It was a horrible department. It was colonial and exploitative. I soon learned that focus was turning away from Alaska Native communities and towards Russia, because the former no longer wanted to play along, as I found out. Even on a personal level, the behaviour of some people was appalling. For example, when I told my advisor that I’d been given the name of my teacher’s sister, her response was, ‘Ooh, you’ll be able to get lots of information now!’ When she asked where I got my parka and I told her my teacher made it for me, she literally rubbed her hands together and said, ‘You’re definitely in now.’  I was repulsed. I later learned that both she and her husband had experience in being opposed by the Native people they were working with. In both cases, statements were made in books (before publication) that the Native people felt misrepresented them. Instead of fixing these mistakes, they opted to ignore the concerns and publish anyway. This was a lesson to me about what kind of work would be expected of me if I continued. I tried to thread the needle for a few years altogether, looking for a way to satisfy the committee while still remaining ethical, but I wasn’t having much luck.

There was some ridiculous stuff, too. I was doing an independent study with a guy Bill worked with and we were sitting in his office when he decided to start baring his soul. He was well aware of my feminist ideas, that gender was one of my main areas of interest, and that I was teaching the Gender in Cross Cultural Perspectives course, so when he started off with, ‘I probably shouldn’t say this to you...’ I was already thinking, ‘Yeah, probably not. Stop talking now.’ But he didn’t and proceeded to tell me that he felt that his job was far more important than his wife’s job. I was thinking that since he didn’t do very much, and what he did do was underwhelming, this was a delusional statement, but this was the same guy who was having a temper tantrum one day when Bill and I walked into the office—he was angry because he’d forgotten his email password, so couldn’t access it. This was somehow the fault of the tech people. So I wasn’t expecting much of an answer when I asked him why he thought he was so much more important than his wife. He replied that he got paid a lot and was proud of bringing home the bacon. He said he would sometimes think, ‘Wow, look at all that bacon.’ I burst out laughing in response and it took me a minute or two to be able to respond. When I did, it was to poke holes in his theory. I emailed Bill when I got home and was telling him about this episode and starting laughing all over again. From that day on, we called the guy Bacon Man. 

The same guy commented on how much ‘service’ I was doing—more than was usual for someone in my position. He was right about that and one of those projects was what finally brought things to a head. I was on the dean search committee and we were going through the normal procedures. We made our choice, which was not a person from inside the university. This angered some people in the communications department, where their head had applied—and not made the final three. Things got quite nasty. One member of the search committee got threats on her voicemail. We all got a nasty email from a professor in the communication department. This hit my last nerve and I replied, basically ripping him a new one. He apologized to all of us and to me personally, admitting that he should not have sent the email. Others on the committee thanked me for doing what I did. But I’d had enough. 

When that year was done, I went home to make sure, but I pretty much knew I was done. When the next academic year started, I informed my committee that I was withdrawing. They tried to talk me out of it and my chair had me in her office, reading a letter she wrote when she was a new anthropologist, expressing some of the same concerns I had. ‘See,’ she said, ‘We all go through this. Please reconsider.’ I told her that in spite of her misgivings, she decided to go ahead anyway and to ignore her concerns, but I couldn’t do that and I knew that if I went ahead and ‘got the piece of paper’ as some were encouraging me to do, I would feel ashamed of the degree. I am proud of the work I did as an undergrad and in my MA program. I would not be proud of this. So I walked. It was hard and I went through a tough time afterwards, even though I never doubted that it was the right thing to do. I’d spent most of my adult life up to that point in academia and I wasn’t sure what would be next. But I knew what I shouldn’t do and that was a start.

Friday, March 5, 2021

Adventures in Fieldwork Part 5

 Adventures in Fieldwork Part 5
Note: This essay is about my own culture shock and is not in any way intended to be disparaging towards the people in Village. The conditions there are complex and I am not being critical of the place or the people. My focus is on my own mindset and shortcomings in this situation.  Photo by Shari Burke.

the village late July sunset 

As I lay there fully dressed on top of the bed, I was thinking over everything that had happened to me in my degree program.  I was thinking of my last trip to Village.  I thought of what I would tell my advisor and my friends.  I realized I didn’t really care about any of that.  I had to be realistic. Now that I had a better understanding of the reality of Village life, I had to admit that doing extensive fieldwork, which would require me to live in Village for at least a year was probably not a good idea. Bringing our high-school-aged daughter to such a place was out of the question and I was not keen on being away from her and Bill for that long, even though I could’ve gone home for visits. Since there was no way I was going to sleep at all that night, I had plenty of time to think about the situation, the kind of work I wanted to do, my sense of ethics, and more. As I lay there fully dressed and on top of the covers, with my parka over me as a blanket, I listened as the son came home and was intercepted before he could enter his room and be instructed to sleep on the couch.  I heard people screaming down the streets on their snow machines.  I wanted to go home.  I really had no interest in fieldwork anymore.  I had changed my subject after the last trip from motherhood to language preservation thinking it would be less emotionally charged, but suddenly I knew that it was all emotionally charged. To my friends in Fairbanks I was Kuukpiaq.  To the people in Village, I was WHITE, which automatically made me suspicious. Could I overcome their suspicions? Maybe. Did I want to keep trying for even longer than the few years I’d already invested? I rather thought not. I watched the hands on my watch move closer to the time when I could get out of bed and leave.  I planned my strategy and what I was going to say.  

 As it turned out, most everyone was up and out early—there was a game. I got up as soon as they had left. Because I thought there might still be one person in the house, I pretended to call home and learn that someone was ill, so I could use that as my excuse for leaving without causing hard feelings. I called the airline to change my return ticket. I had a choice of a flight that was leaving in 2 hours or one that would be leaving in 12 hours.  The idea of 12 more hours there was not penetrating my brain, so I reserved a spot on the flight a mere two hours away.  Because I had no idea what the address was, I could not call a taxi, so I prepared to walk. I threw on clean clothes, brushed my teeth, wrote a note, left it with the gifts I’d brought, picked up my suitcase in one hand and my carry-on bag in the other and stepped out into the dark –25 F degree Village morning. Village is above the arctic circle and it was January, so there was not going to be any daylight for a long while. I began to walk toward the airport.  The streets were deserted. I could see the airport in the distance and it seemed to pull me toward it, but when I got to the gate that we had driven out of the night before, it was closed! My heart sank, but I doggedly kept on. I was determined to get to that airport.

 I put my suitcase down and looked around.  I spotted a road that seemed to go in the right direction, so I grabbed my suitcase and headed that way.  Suddenly there were headlights coming toward me.  “Please let it be a woman,” I repeated over and over as the headlights got closer.  The car stopped and an older woman rolled down her window.  “Where are you coming from?” she asked incredulously. She was apparently unaccustomed to seeing large white women hauling luggage down the street on foot in the dark and cold winter mornings.  “Back there somewhere,” I answered as I waved my hand in the direction I had come.  “Does this road take you to the airport terminal building?”  She invited me to hop in and I gratefully accepted.  I felt like hugging her, but settled for thanking her about a million times as she pulled up to the door of the terminal building. 
I went inside, checked in and called Bill.  He was still asleep, but woke up quickly as I told him in a quiet voice, lest I be overheard, that I would be home later that day.  I felt a bit silly, speaking in hushed tones hunched over the receiver with my hand cupped over my mouth and the phone, but it’s a small place where everyone knows everyone. It seemed a bit dramatic, but I was very tired and focused on getting out without hurt feelings. I knew the flight from Anchorage was already late, but I was not at all concerned about that.  I would have happily spent days in the Anchorage airport as long as I was out of Village.

I only had to spend three hours in Anchorage, and I did have to go buy a novel in one of those airport shops, because I’d foolishly brought only academic reading with me and given the small amount of sleep I’d gotten for the previous week or so, that wasn’t gonna cut it. The novel filled the time and I was soon stumbling off the plane and into the terminal in Fairbanks.  My husband greeted me with a rather wide-eyed look and explained that a friend had brought him because it was so cold (-45F) that the truck battery had frozen.  We walked up to the friend who had the same wide-eyed look about him as his mouth fell open.  I guess I was looking a little worse for wear.  
 Friend went to get his vehicle and we headed for home. On the way, I told them both what had happened. When I got to the end of the story, I said it out loud for the first time. ‘I won’t be going back to Village again,’  I stated. I watched our friend’s wide eyes in the rear view mirror as he slowly nodded.

Thursday, March 4, 2021

Adventures in Fieldwork Part 4

 Adventures in Fieldwork Part 4
Note: This essay is about my own culture shock and is not in any way intended to be disparaging towards the people in Village. The conditions there are complex and I am not being critical of the place or the people. My focus is on my own mindset and shortcomings in this situation.
All photos by Shari Burke

One and a half years after I left Village, I was preparing to return.  I’d switched my research focus to language preservation, thinking that this might be more useful to the Native people I hoped to be working with. Also, I was quite fascinated by the topic. I had another grant and had managed to convince myself that since I had experienced the culture shock last time, I would be better prepared for the trip this time.  I kept repeating this to myself as if that would make something wonderful happen. Instead, I spent the week between Christmas and New Year’s with an upset stomach and headaches. I would leave on January 2.  
   This time, I would not be able to stay with my friends.  They were in Fairbanks and in their house were two of their daughters, their boyfriends and assorted children.  My friend thought I’d be more comfortable elsewhere and she wanted to be the one to find a place for me to stay. I would have rather done this myself, but she was adamant and I did not want to insult her. I was told not to worry—I could either stay with this woman from the Park Service, or with some relatives I had met last time I was there—since I was Kuukpiaq, she felt they would be happy to have me there, if they were in town. Besides, it would be better to stay with the relatives I was told.  The woman from the Park Service would be a last resort since she was white woman.  I stopped myself before I could remind her that I, too, was a white woman!
    On January 1, I heard that the call from the relatives had come—they would be happy to host me for the week I was there, I was told.  All I had to do was call and let them know when I would be arriving.  I did that immediately.  My call was answered by a barely intelligible drunk young man who informed me that his parents would not be home that night.  There was nothing else to do but to wait until morning.  I slept little that night.
    The next morning dawned clear and cold.  I called Village and spoke to a somewhat dazed sounding fellow, who said he would be at the airport later that day.  I left my house and in spite of the cold, found myself drenched in a cold, clammy sweat.  I sat in the plane at the gate for a long time while they waited to see what the weather was like in Anchorage.  I watched them de-ice the plane and prayed  for a blizzard in Anchorage.  Alas, no blizzard appeared and we were soon on our way.  My mental conversation with myself continued all the way to Anchorage and through the next flight.  “Everything will be fine,” I told myself.

 
I got to Village and walked out the back end of the plane and down the steps.  We headed toward the terminal building and I scanned the crowd looking for the people who were to meet me, but there was no sign of them.  By the time I got inside, the luggage was already being unloaded and there were stacks of beer cases duct taped together.  A couple of minutes before my suitcase appeared, my hosts rushed in.  They exchanged glances when they saw my suitcase, but I told myself it meant nothing.  It was just my nervousness.  I kept up the stream of cheerful chatter that was flowing out from my mouth.
    We rushed back to their house and wolfed down some dinner.  then we sped over to the school where a basketball tournament was being held.  In an Alaskan village, basketball tournaments are like the Super Bowl.  We settled into the bleachers as the game was starting.  I was informed that both teams were from Village, but one was Native and one was White.  As I dutifully began to cheer for the Native team, they relaxed and got into the game.  I started to relax, too.
    That was a bit premature, however.  We went back to their house after the game and engaged in small talk for awhile.  Then they told me that since as far as they knew their son hadn’t been home in a week, I would sleep in his room.  “I hope he doesn’t come home and get into bed with you, “ they said laughing.  I smiled weakly and thought of the drunken man I had spoken to on the phone.  I knew in my gut that he’d be home that night.  Then they finally got to the point.  “How long are you staying?” they asked.  I tried to be upbeat as I told them I’d be in town for a week.  Their faces fell and my heart began to pound.  They then proceeded to spend 15 minutes explaining why I could not stay there.  I told them that I could get in touch with the woman from the Park Service.  Acid dripped from every word as they asked with disgust, “Is she WHITE?”  “I think so,” I responded and felt very, very tired.  I said I would go to bed.

Wednesday, March 3, 2021

Adventures in Fieldwork Part 3

Adventures in Fieldwork Part 3
Note: This essay is about my own culture shock and is not in any way intended to be disparaging towards the people in Village. The conditions there are complex and I am not being critical of the place or the people. My focus is on my own mindset and shortcomings in this situation.  All photos are by Shari Burke

As July turned into August, my fear grew.  Suddenly the streets were filled with drunken people.  I speculated that unemployment and/or welfare checks had started to arrive and the bootleggers were getting some beginning-of-the-month business.  Whatever was going on, I did not like it. The same people that were looking at me as an intruder in their part of town now knew where I was and they were quite out of it.  They were not just tipsy, but staggering, falling and slurring their words so much it was impossible to make out what they were trying to say.  They banged on the (lockless) door at midnight and at 6 in the morning.  I was often alone in the house as my friends went to comfort families of the people who had died. I sat on “my” bed in the back corner of the house and wrote frantically in my fieldwork journal, trying to stay ahead of my own thoughts. I became irrationally convinced that I would never make it back to Fairbanks. I also knew that I was having a big bad case of culture shock and was probably not handling it well. I didn’t care. All I knew was that I had strayed way too far out of my comfort zone and I wanted to get back. I wanted to talk to Bill, but there was no way to do that, except at a public phone, where I would be overheard. 

 After what was unquestionably the longest week of my life, the day of my departure arrived.  It had not been a very successful week, as far as my goals to meet people went, other than the first day, when I was paraded around as a novelty. I did meet with one woman, who worked in some official capacity, but she was kind of suspicious of the work I wanted to do. This is unsurprising in retrospect. The situation in Alaska was changing at the time and Native groups and people were starting to be more clear about telling White researchers to back off. I hadn’t realised this when I’d arrived, but the department I was working out of was just starting to transition to Russian studies more than Alaska Native studies as a result. Native people didn’t like the colonial nature of the university and the people working there—a view I rapidly came to share. So on some level, I knew I would have to rethink some things, but at the moment, I just wanted to go home.

My friend went into her freezer in the yard and got out a big salmon for me to take home—for Bill, she said.  She had no box so she put it in a trash bag and used the one thin strip of duct tape she had to close it.  I thanked her for everything and went to the airport.  I was there before the building opened.  I waited by the door with my suitcase and my fish. All week, the radio had been making announcements about cancelled flights and I was terrified that mine would be another one.
   When the ticket agent arrived to open up, she looked at me as though I was the strangest person she had ever seen.  She said it would take her a few minutes to get her computer set up.  I told her that was just fine—I was extra friendly as if that would help ensure that I would get out.  She told me I needed a box for the fish.  I was about to thrust it at her and ask if she wanted it when she told me I could buy one for $10.  She was very apologetic, but I cheerfully told her that would be great and please give me a receipt.  My grant would pay for the box, thought I would have happily paid it myself.  Before long I was officially checked in.  I thought my knees were going to buckle I was so relieved.  The plane was coming and when it left again, I’d be on it!!  YIPPEE!!
    As we taxied down the runway and lifted off, I was repeating, “Thank you, thank you, thank you” in my head like a mantra.  The next thing I remember I was in Anchorage and my name was being called. I went up to the desk and they asked me if I’d mind sitting in first class on the flight to Fairbanks.  I said that would be no problem and inquired whether anyone ever refused this request. They said sometimes people who travel together don’t want to be split up. Not a problem for me and in fact I would have sat in the cargo hold if it meant getting home, but there I was in Row 1 while the extra solicitous flight attendant asked me if she could get me a beverage before the others got on the plane. I was rather amused when I asked for coffee. I had not showered in a week—just taken sponge baths when the house was empty and washed my hair in the yard.  When I went to use the bathroom on the plane, the door reached the floor.  I was getting into more familiar territory.
    I was first off the plane in Fairbanks and my husband was waiting.  As we waited for the suitcase and the fish, I began to tremble.  We were almost home when he asked me, “Well, how was it?”  I burst into tears and sputtered, “It was HORRIBLE!”  He looked at me in shock.  We got home. I greeted our daughter and got into a very hot shower.  I began to scrub my body while the tears that were still flowing scrubbed away the fear, discomfort and disappointment that my own naïve ideas about what village life was like were shattered.  The relief I felt that it was over continued to wash over me long after my shower.  I didn’t stop trembling for a long time and I have never forgotten the pain that I witnessed in Village.

Tuesday, March 2, 2021

Adventures in Fieldwork Part 2

Adventures in Fieldwork Part 2
(all names have been changed and all photos are by Shari Burke)
Note: This essay is about my own culture shock and is not in any way intended to be disparaging towards the people in Village. The conditions there are complex and I am not being critical of the place or the people. My focus is on my own mindset and shortcomings in this situation.

At the end of July, I boarded the plane for Anchorage—passengers in the back half, cargo in front. I do not remember any of the trip to Anchorage or from there to Village, but somehow I got there and was met at the airport by my friends.  We went to their house and had coffee, then went around town to meet various family members and friends.  Everyone knew I was coming and I was quite a novelty—Kuukpiaq—this white woman who could eat Eskimo food and speak some Inupiaq.  Fortunately for me, there was no niqipiaq—just vats of coffee—although this would change. 

After visiting several homes, we were in the last one for the day and when asked if I wanted coffee, I said, ‘No, thank you, I’ve had a lot today.’ I can drink a lot of coffee without issue, but I’d had so much on that day that I was feeling jittery and I didn’t need any more jitters! Nevertheless, when I was handed a cup of coffee a few minutes later, I took it and said thank you. The next morning, I was told that, since there was no running water in my friends’ house, I should go back to that house and tell them I wanted to take a shower. I was really unhappy about this, but my friend would not have it any other way, so I took a towel and walked over there, hoping more fervently with each step that they would not be at home. They weren’t.

 
I learned quickly how unusual I was.  Village is extremely segregated—Native people live on one side of town and white people, who are virtually all government employees with agencies like Bureau of Land Management and the Park Service lived on the other.  They were not wanted in town and people were suspicious of them. They had good reason to be suspicious of the government agencies, although many of the people working in them meant well. Sometimes whites and Natives mingled at the grocery store, but mostly, they just stayed in “their” parts of town.  My presence in the Native section raised some eyebrows and earned me some hostile stares from people.  My excitement began to dissipate a little and my nervousness grew.

On a practical level, I was learning to overcome some more discomfort.  The house my friends lived in was essentially a plywood room with curtains hung up in front of the beds.  Since there was no running water or septic, the “bathroom” was a bucket next to the furnace in a tiny alcove.  There was a piece of plywood over the bucket with a hole and a toilet seat.  The bucket was lined with a plastic garbage bag and when it was full it was taken into the yard and a new bag was put in.  This is called a “honey bucket” in Alaska.  It is a common system in rural areas.  That was fine—I expected something like that.  What I was completely unprepared for was the fact that the door didn’t reach the floor!  It was about two feet short.  I had never before had to attempt going to the bathroom behind half a door while people were sipping tea a few feet away!!  I began to time my beverage intake so that I could use public restrooms while we were out, but sometimes that didn’t work.  I had to just deal with my discomfort, which wasn’t the worst of it in any case.

 
I had only been there a couple of days when the dying began.  There were three deaths in town the week I was there—a very large number in such a small place.  The first one was a 17-year-old girl who was somehow related to my friends. She died when the minivan she was drag racing in (on a gravel road) flipped over.  I was asked to go along and give my condolences to the family since they were relatives and I was Kuukpiaq.  I went along, and felt awful.  They had never met me, but I was introduced as Kuukpiaq. They glared at me. As I murmured how sorry I was about their loss, I was trying to take in the house.  We walked into a kitchen, which was a plywood room with a cooler on the floor. There was nothing else. A filthy sheet was hanging up beyond that blocking off part of the house.  Everyone was congregated in a narrow dark room with a bed at each end, a couch against the wall and a TV, VCR and cable hook-up on the other wall.  I looked down and saw I was standing in piles of dirt and cigarette butts. I was no longer excited.  I was sad and scared—not an uncommon thing in a new fieldwork situation.

Monday, March 1, 2021

Adventures in Fieldwork Part 1

photo by Shari Burke
Adventures in Fieldwork Part 1
When I started my PhD studies at the university in Fairbanks, my original intention was to learn about the ideology of motherhood in Inupiaq culture. I’d just done my MA research on the same topic with white, suburban women and I was interested to see what was different and what was the same. I knew this would entail fieldwork in a village, if I could work it out with some residents of a village. I was open as to the exact location. When the new Inupiaq teacher arrived and named me after her sister, it seemed reasonable to try to work with her in her village. She was excited about this, so I proceeded in that direction. My advisor was all for it, as there was almost no work published about the area, which I will just call ‘Village’ here. She advised me to plan for a preliminary trip to Village to try to make contacts and set things up for a longer stay in future, and to apply for a particular grant to fund this trip. I worked with my teacher and her husband on the plan and budget.

I applied for and received the grant to go to fish camp for three weeks in the summer.  I would fly to Village, and we would go on a boat across to the mainland and then by 4-wheeler to camp.  I was excited about the prospect, but nervous about doing something like that.  It was far different than anything I had ever done in my life.  I gave my friends the money they said they needed for gas and oil and I shipped food to Village.  They had gone back there when the semester was over and were preparing for my arrival.  They were also planning something I did not know about—at least right away.

photo by Shari Burke
Our friends had kicked the booze in the past, but the stress of the year in Fairbanks had driven them to start drinking again and things were kind of weird when they were drunk. About 4 days before I was to leave, I got a phone call asking me to plan on bringing several cases of beer and large jugs of wine with me—not the small bottles, they emphasized—the big ones.  Village was a damp village-you could bring alcohol in but you could not buy it in town. My nervousness ballooned into near panic.  Was I really expected to travel from Fairbanks to Anchorage to Village with cases of beer and jugs of wine as my luggage?  Did they think that I would feel good about going to a very remote and inaccessible place where there would be guns, knives, strangers, and lots of booze?  But if I didn’t go, I’d have to pay back the grant and some of that money was gone already!  And what about their feelings?  Could I actually tell them that I was scared to go with them because they’d be drinking?  When my advisor invited me to her home for tea and a chat before I was to leave, I told her about the situation and she was very alarmed. She did not come right out and say, ‘Don’t go.’ but she strongly suggested I should not put myself in that situation. Her husband was also on my committee and he called me later that day, telling me that Fiona (my advisor, not her real name) had said that I was aware of the dangers of sexual assault in such situations (I was). He was also strongly suggesting that I not make the trip. I talked it over with Bill, who was also worried and I decided I was not going to go to fish camp. I needed a new plan, because I knew they would not be able to give me back the grant money I’d already given them. Things were also complicated by the fact that they had no phone and to get in touch with them, I had to call the radio station and have them broadcast a message to my teacher so she could then call me from a pay phone. 

I did this and told them that I was not going to bring booze with me and I was not going to fish camp. They were disappointed, and I think they felt bad.  There was relief all around when I managed to change my ticket and make plans to spend a week in town, trying to meet people.  I told them they could keep the oil and gas money if I could stay at their house and we’d call it rent.  Things were back on track.