NotHardUp1
What? Me? Really?
So, Telly's locked thread caused me to go read up on how Eskimo is perceived by Natives in the north. Having lived in Alaska for a couple of years, I kinda remembered it NOT being a thing there.
This link to the Alaskan Native Language Center in Fairbanks offers good insight into the question, and the evolution of thought by Native Alaskans on the topic: https://www.uaf.edu/anlc/resources/inuit-eskimo/
Our vicarious hypersensitivity is another example of cultural appropriation. "We" take offense on behalf of others, which is more than a little bit condescending considering Alaskans are fully capable of speaking for themselves and their own cultural and linguistic sensibilities and sensitivities.
What is lost on the non-Native population too often is that the Eskimos resent being inappropriately lumped in with the Inuit, a tribe and/or linguistic group that they do not recognize as their own. Identities are very regional.
When I lived there, I remember being told that if Northwest Natives strayed up into the Eskimo lands of Alaska, they were invariably killed as invaders. They may have looked like their close kin to the north, but they were not counted so.
This link to the Alaskan Native Language Center in Fairbanks offers good insight into the question, and the evolution of thought by Native Alaskans on the topic: https://www.uaf.edu/anlc/resources/inuit-eskimo/
Our vicarious hypersensitivity is another example of cultural appropriation. "We" take offense on behalf of others, which is more than a little bit condescending considering Alaskans are fully capable of speaking for themselves and their own cultural and linguistic sensibilities and sensitivities.
What is lost on the non-Native population too often is that the Eskimos resent being inappropriately lumped in with the Inuit, a tribe and/or linguistic group that they do not recognize as their own. Identities are very regional.
When I lived there, I remember being told that if Northwest Natives strayed up into the Eskimo lands of Alaska, they were invariably killed as invaders. They may have looked like their close kin to the north, but they were not counted so.


