Abstract
Nunalleq: Stories from the Village of our Ancestors tells the story of the archaeological excavations of a pre-contact Yup’ik sod house in Quinhagak, Alaska. The digital resource was co-designed by the local community in Quinhagak with archaeologists from the Universities of Aberdeen and Dundee.
The project creatively unites science and history with traditional Yup’ik ways of knowing and contemporary oral storytelling. Where interpretive outreach material traditionally adopts the lone voice of the specialist, this project makes a practice-based methodological contribution to the fields of indigenous and community archaeology through a multi-vocal approach to science communication.
The resource was distributed to 29 schools in the Yukon-Kuskokwim School District in the Yup’ik region of Alaska, where it is directly being integrated into the curriculum, in addition to 15 schools and 5 museums and culture centres across the wider state. It is available free for anyone to download at www.seriousanimation.com/Nunalleq.
The resource was presented at the Museums Alaska conference (September 2019), has two peer-reviewed publications and has been covered in both UK and USA press. The work was funded by two AHRC grants (totalling £5.5K to UoAb), a UoAb IKEC Award (£10K) and a UoD internal award (£3.5K).
The project is awarded the Archaeological Institute of America: 2021 Award for Outstanding Work in Digital Archaeology.
The project creatively unites science and history with traditional Yup’ik ways of knowing and contemporary oral storytelling. Where interpretive outreach material traditionally adopts the lone voice of the specialist, this project makes a practice-based methodological contribution to the fields of indigenous and community archaeology through a multi-vocal approach to science communication.
The resource was distributed to 29 schools in the Yukon-Kuskokwim School District in the Yup’ik region of Alaska, where it is directly being integrated into the curriculum, in addition to 15 schools and 5 museums and culture centres across the wider state. It is available free for anyone to download at www.seriousanimation.com/Nunalleq.
The resource was presented at the Museums Alaska conference (September 2019), has two peer-reviewed publications and has been covered in both UK and USA press. The work was funded by two AHRC grants (totalling £5.5K to UoAb), a UoAb IKEC Award (£10K) and a UoD internal award (£3.5K).
The project is awarded the Archaeological Institute of America: 2021 Award for Outstanding Work in Digital Archaeology.
| Original language | English |
|---|---|
| Media of output | Software |
| Publication status | Published - 1 Sept 2019 |
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