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Book Cover
E-book
Author Gombay, Nicole, 1965-

Title Making a living : place, food, and economy in an Inuit community / Nicole Gombay
Published Saskatoon : Purich Pub., [2010]
©2010

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Description 1 online resource (230 pages) : illustrations, maps, portrait
Contents 1. Placing Economics: Telling Stories About Food and Making a Living [Food security] -- Introduction; Welcome to Puvirnituq; Narrative; Place; Issues of Economics; The Place of Economy and the Economy of Place -- 2. The Place of Country Foods -- Country Foods in Place -- Niqituinnaq -- Seasons, Weather, Time, and Country Foods -- Common Property and Country Foods -- Animal Relations and Country Foods -- The Social Relations of Country Foods -- Memory, Home, and Country Foods -- Knowledge, Place, and Country Foods -- Health and Country Foods -- Politics and Country Foods -- Economics and Country Foods
3. The Political Economy of Nunavik and the Commoditization of Country Foods -- Government Approaches to Economic Development in the Canadian North -- The Political Economy of Nunavik -- The Commoditization of Country Foods among Inuit: An Overview -- Forms of Commoditization in Nunavik -- 4. Sold Down the River: The Business of Country Foods in Puvirnituq -- History, Economy, and Society -- The Commoditization of Country Foods in Puvirnituq
Summary "Although food is vital to our daily lives, we tend to be unaware of the particulars of where it came from and how it was produced. We simply go to the market and buy what we need in neatly packaged containers. But what was required to get that food there in the first place? In some societies obtaining food is not merely a matter of going to market. Instead it involves the active participation of community members in its harvesting, distributing, and sharing so that ideally no one goes without. Such is the case of many Indigenous communities, including Puvirnituq, the Inuit settlement in Northern Quebec that is the setting for this book
Until recently, most residents of this Arctic village made their living off the land. Successful hunting, fishing, trapping and gathering, so vital to people's survival, were underpinned by the expectation that food should be shared. As the Inuit were in some cases drawn and in others forced to move into settlements, they have had to confront how to accommodate their belief in sharing to the demands of a market economy. Rooted in phenomenological engagements with place, and using the commoditization of country foods harvested from the local environment as a vehicle, the author documents the experiences of an Inuit community as it strives to retain the values rooted in life on the land while adjusting to the realities of life in settlements."--Pub. website
Bibliography Includes bibliographical references and index
Notes Print version record
Subject Inuit -- Food -- Québec (Province) -- Puvirnituq
Inuit -- Food -- Economic aspects -- Québec (Province) -- Puvirnituq
Inuit -- Québec (Province) -- Puvirnituq -- Economic conditions
Inuit -- Québec (Province) -- Puvirnituq -- Social conditions
Inuit -- Government policy -- Canada
SOCIAL SCIENCE -- Discrimination & Race Relations.
SOCIAL SCIENCE -- Minority Studies.
Inuit -- Economic conditions
Inuit -- Social conditions
Inuits -- Canada -- Alimentation -- Aspect économique -- Québec (Canada ; province) -- Puvirnituq.
Inuits -- Canada -- Québec (Canada ; province) -- Puvirnituq (Canada, Nord-du-Québec) -- Conditions économiques.
Inuits -- Canada -- Québec (Canada ; province) -- Puvirnituq (Canada, Nord-du-Québec) -- Conditions sociales.
Inuits -- Canada -- Politique publique.
Inuits -- Politique gouvernementale -- Canada.
Canada
Form Electronic book
ISBN 9781895830743
1895830745
9781895830750
1895830753