- 29-12-06-w
- Stuk
Part of Wilson Duff fonds
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Part of Wilson Duff fonds
Part of Wilson Duff fonds
Page 22 - Shuswap population, continued
Part of Wilson Duff fonds
Page 24 - Summary of Interior Salish population
Part of Wilson Duff fonds
Part of Wilson Duff fonds
Part of Wilson Duff fonds
Page 26 - Tsilhqot'in population
Part of Wilson Duff fonds
Part of Wilson Duff fonds
Page 29 - Tahltan, Inland tlingit, and kaska dena population
Part of Wilson Duff fonds
Page 28 - Carrier population, continued
Part of Wilson Duff fonds
Page 33 - Summary of BC Indigenous population by linguistic affiliation
Part of Wilson Duff fonds
Page 32 - total athapaskan population
Part of Wilson Duff fonds
Page 31 - Summary of athapaskan population
Part of Wilson Duff fonds
Page 34 - summary of BC Indigenous population by regions
Part of Wilson Duff fonds
Cassette labeled “Lecture, 301 on Edenshaw”
Part of Wilson Duff fonds
Final lecture of Anthropology 301, April 3, 1974, “Resurgence of Indian Culture”
Part of Wilson Duff fonds
Item is an audio recording of a lecture given by Wilson Duff on the “Resurgence of Indian Culture.” On side A, Duff speaks on the failings of colonialist education systems, First Nations traditional knowledge, and his interpretations of Haida art. Works discussed include a Raven rattle and a chest carved by Charles Edenshaw. Side B continues with Duff’s observations on government interest in, and appropriation of, First Nations art and culture as symbols of Canadian identity, and cultural repatriation.
Lecture for Anthropology 304, “Deep Meanings in NWC Art” February 6, 1976
Part of Wilson Duff fonds
Lecture on Women and bears, February 26, 1974
Part of Wilson Duff fonds
Item is an audio recording of a lecture given by Wilson Duff on “Women and Bears.” Duff uses the story of the woman who married a bear, represented in a Haida sculpture, to frame a discussion of the disenfranchisement of First Nations women under the Indian Act, the Lavell case (AG v. Lavell, 1971) and the Bedard case (R v. Bedard, 1973), and Haida and Nisga’a art. Lecture is recorded on both Side A and Side B.
Wilson Duff interview with Jonathan Johnson at Kispiox
Part of Wilson Duff fonds
Item is an audio recording of an interview by Wilson Duff with Jonathan Johnson about the geography of the Gitxsan village of Kispiox and surrounding region. According to Tribal Boundaries in the Nass Watershed by Neil J. Stewart (MOA Reading Room, call number 12.7c GIT STE), Jonathan Johnson (1902-1968) of Kispiox was from the House of Xhliimlaxha and had knowledge of territories in the Nass watershed, including his father’s territory at Gwinhagiistxw. In interviews that took place on July 6 and 7, 1965, Duff gathered information about house territories in the Nass and Skeena watersheds to produce a map showing territories and numbered sites at Kispiox, see the Wilson Duff fonds at MOA, Box/File# Mc15, File# 10-B-21.