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Ilhtsel t’áméx te’í:lé kw’els ílh stl’ítl’qelh”: Stó:lō Weavers and Settler Anthropology
1. My #Beyond150CA paper is "'Ilhtsel t’áméx te’í:lé kw’els ílh stl’ítl’qelh': Stó:lō Weavers & Settler Anthropology in the 1960s" #cdnhist
2. I come to this topic as a Xwelítem - a white settler. My family has lived in Coast Salish territories for 3 generations. #Beyond150CA
3. My work follows Indigenous scholars' call to unlearn white narratives & recenter Indigenous ppls in hists of their own lands #Beyond150CA
4. I use oral hist interviews from the 1960s to explore engagements/estrangements b/w Stó:lō weavers & a white settler anthro #Beyond150CA
5. Stó:lō weaving has a long history, & weaving is an important cultural touchstone in Stó:lō & other Coast Salish communities. #Beyond150CA
6. Xwelítem anthro Oliver Wells, following salvage paradigm notions, was fascinated by Stó:lō culture, sought to preserve it. #Beyond150CA
7. During the 1960s, Stó:lō people, incl women weavers, did dozens of interviews with Wells; some became friends (?) with him #Beyond150CA
8. He is often credited as the saviour of Stó:lō weaving. Yet, the interviews show that Stó:lō women maintained this practice. #Beyond150CA
9. In a 1962 interview, Sqewóthelwet (Margaretta Jim) explained to Wells that weaving had always been part of her life. #Beyond150CA
10. In her memoirs, Xwelíqwiya (Rena Point Bolton) discusses guiding Wells in the work he did, helping him engage other weavers #Beyond150CA
11. Stó:lō weaving was never extinct ∴ didn’t need a white expert to "revive" it. Instead, I argue, Wells' work popularized it. #Beyond150CA
12. Wells' questions about the practice brought weavers together, and he provided some materials and helped sell weavings. #Beyond150CA
13. Wells' legacy lies not in "saving" weaving, but in the interviews themselves, for their preservation of Stó:lō voices. #Beyond150CA
14. Stó:lō weavers enjoyed the popularity Wells brought them, but they maintained weaving themselves, as their ancestors did. #Beyond150CA
15. Listening to the interviews reminds us to center Indigenous women's voices, and refuse the idea of the white male saviour. #Beyond150CA
If you would like to see the comments and questions shared in response to Madeline Knickerbocker's presentation, please explore the presentation on Twitter. You can follow Madeline Knickerbocker on Twitter @maddieknicker .
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