FY2004
The Jesup North Pacific Expedition (1897-1902) was an unprecedented anthropological
survey organized and implemented by the American Museum of Natural History at
the behest of famed anthropologist Franz Boas. The results were published in a
report series running to 11 volumes. The lifestyles and cultures of indigenous
peoples living scattered throughout this region, which were the object of this
investigation (areas of the Pacific coast north of the Columbia River on the North
American side and north of the Amur River in Asia) have since been washed over
by waves of modernization and undergone tremendous changes in the century since
the expedition. This research will use the work of researchers who have actually
done contemporary field research in this region, as well as existing records of
oral traditions to make specific comparisons with the results of Jesup, so as
to clarify the degree of change that the cultures of these various ethnic groups
have undergone. We will also discuss how resistance to discrimination and assimilation
policies have affected these various ethnic groups during the process of their
incorporation into the modern state, as well as problems they face in how they
can build their own identities.