Farthest North College President

Farthest North College President
Author: William R. Cashen
Publisher:
Total Pages: 418
Release: 1972
Genre: Biography & Autobiography
ISBN:

Biography of Alaska's pioneer educator and a history of the institution he founded.

Sadie Brower Neakok

Sadie Brower Neakok
Author: Margaret B. Blackman
Publisher: University of Washington Press
Total Pages: 332
Release: 1992
Genre: Biography & Autobiography
ISBN: 9780295971803

This biography of Sadie Brower Neakok of Barrow, northern Alaska, records the life of the daughter of an Inupiaq mother and a white father, and her successful blending of Eskimo and white traditions in the service of her community. The text uses the oral history method of recording information and includes a map and contemporary photographs.

Alaska

Alaska
Author: Stephen W. Haycox
Publisher: University of Washington Press
Total Pages: 435
Release: 2020-04-09
Genre: History
ISBN: 0295746874

Alaska often looms large as a remote, wild place with endless resources and endlessly independent, resourceful people. Yet it has always been part of larger stories: the movement of Indigenous peoples from Asia into the Americas and their contact with and accommodation to Western culture; the spread of European political economy to the New World; the expansion of American capitalism and culture; and the impacts of climate change. In this updated classic, distinguished historian Stephen Haycox surveys the state’s cultural, political, economic, and environmental past, examining its contemporary landscape and setting the region in a broader, global context. Tracing Alaska’s transformation from the early postcontact period through the modern era, Haycox explores the ever-evolving relationship between Native Alaskans and the settlers and institutions that have dominated the area, highlighting Native agency, advocacy, and resilience. Throughout, he emphasizes the region’s systemic dependence on both federal support and outside corporate investment in natural resources—furs, gold, copper, salmon, oil—and offers a less romantic, more complex history that acknowledges the broader national and international contexts of Alaska’s past.

An Alaska Anthology

An Alaska Anthology
Author: Stephen W. Haycox
Publisher: University of Washington Press
Total Pages: 479
Release: 2011-06-01
Genre: History
ISBN: 0295800372

Alaska, with its Indian, Eskimo, and Aleut heritage, its century of Russian colonization, its peoples’ formidable struggles to wrest a living (or a fortune) from the North’s isolated and harsh environment, and its relatively recent achievement of statehood, has long captured the popular imagination. In An Alaska Anthology, twenty-five contemporary scholars explore the region’s pivotal events, significant themes, and major players, Native, Russian, Canadian, and American. The essays chosen for this anthology represent the very best writing on Alaska, giving great depth to our understanding and appreciation of its history from the days of Russian-American Company domination to the more recent threat of nuclear testing by the Atomic Energy Commission and the influence of oil money on inexperienced politicians. Readers may be familiar with an earlier anthology, Interpreting Alaska’s History, from which the present volume evolved to accommodate an explosion of research in the past decade. While a number of the original pieces were found to be irreplaceable, more than half of the essays are new. The result is a fresh perspective on the subject and an invaluable resource for students, teachers, and scholars.