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Document Description
Title
Swiling
:
an
ethnographic
portrait
of the
Newfoundland
seal
hunt
Author
Wright
,
Guy
David
,
1952-
Description
Thesis
(M.A.)--Memorial
University
of
Newfoundland
,
1983.
Anthropology
Date
1983
Pagination
viii, 256 leaves : ill., maps.
Subject
Sealing--Social
aspects--Newfoundland
and
Labrador
Degree
M.A.
Degree Grantor
Memorial University of Newfoundland. Dept. of Anthropology
Discipline
Anthropology
Language
Eng
Spatial Coverage
Canada--Newfoundland and Labrador
Notes
Bibliography:
leaves
233-239.
Abstract
This
thesis
describes
the
social
and
cultural
meaning
the
Newfoundland
large
vessel
seal
hunt
has for the
men
who
participate
in
it.
Large
vessels
have been
taking
harp
and
hood
seals
off
northern
Newfoundland
since
1793.
Although
technologies
and
economic
emphases
have
changed
over
the
years
, the
actual
work
of
killing
,
skinning
and
harvesting
the
pelts
and
meat
of
seals
on the
ice
remains
little
changed
in
nearly
two
centuries.
The
extremely
harsh
conditions
and
inherent
dangers
have
made
the
seal
hunt
an
important
rite
of
passage
and
renewal
for
men
who
are
able
to
participate.
Several
major
disasters
associated
with
sealing
have
amplified
cultural
attachments
to the
seal
hunt
within
Newfoundland.
--
The
seal
hunt
has
become
a
major
issue
in a
dialogue
between
those
who
regard
it
as
cruel
and
ecologically
dangerous
,
economically
unimportant
and
culturally
indefensible;
and those
who
feel
it
is
a
humane
,
economically
important
and
legitimate
industry.
The
hunt
has
come
under
a
barrage
of
criticism
from
environmental
preservationist
groups
in the
past
two
decades
and
it
appears
these
lobbyists
may
be
successful
in
stopping
or
severely
restricting
the
annual
hunt.
Sealing
is
important
to the
men
for
cultural
,
social
and
ultimately
,
personal
reasons
which
are
extra
to the
more
concrete
economic
importance
it
holds
for
them.
--
Following
the
Introduction
and a
brief
history
of
sealing
in
Newfoundland
, the
body
of the
thesis
presents
the
ethnographic
detail
of a
voyage
to the
hunt
,
using
participant
observer
techniques.
This
description
gives
close
detail
of the
sealers'
interactions
with
each
other
and
relates
,
largely
through
dialogue
, the
feeling
the
sealers
have for and
about
the
hunt.
The
final
chapter
deals
with the
sealers'
motivations
for
persuing
the
hunt.
An
epilogue
suggests
some
possible
implications
should the
hunt
be
ended.
--
No
major
study
of
modern
sealing
has been
undertaken
by an
ethnographer
who
has
participated
in the
hunt.
Recent
events
are
seriously
threatening
sealing
in
Newfoundland;
this
thesis
may
be
viewed
as
salvage
ethnography.
It
is
an
empirically
oriented
work
which
aims
to
show
how an
economic
activity
may
be
embued
with
cultural
meaning.
Type
Text
Resource Type
Electronic
thesis
or
dissertation
Format
Image/jpeg;
Application/pdf
Source
Paper copy kept in the Centre for Newfoundland Studies, Memorial University Libraries
Local Identifier
75272133
Rights
The author retains copyright ownership and moral rights in this thesis. Neither the thesis nor substantial extracts from it may be printed or otherwise reproduced without the author's permission.
Collection
Electronic
Theses
and
Dissertations
Scanning Status
Completed
PDF File
(34.91
MB)
--
http://collections.mun.ca/PDFs/theses/Wright_GuyDavid.pdf
CONTENTdm file name
65537.cpd