TRADITIONAL ALASKAN ESKIMO THEATRE
PERFORMING THE SPIRITS OF THE EARTH
The theatre of the Alaskan Eskimo was a theatre of visions and myths and
functioned in a time when the world was a shroud of mystery filled with spirits.
It was a theatre tradition that originated in the time before time. It was a
time when humans could easily transform into animals and animals into humans.
When myths were formulating the earth's shape and its ways. A millennium
before Aristotle's Poetics, this was a theatre of the earth, for those who lived
by, off of and with the earth. And like the earth was practiced as a
dynamically changing medium of performance expression.
The theatre of the
Alaskan Eskimo was a theatre of the land, its elements and the animals and
humans that inhabited that reality. It was a theatre interlinked to its culture
as only aboriginal performance can be; seperate but inseparable, a part, but of
the whole.
Generally dismissed or forgotten by the west as satanic, heathen,
idolatrous, ritualistic and ceremonial, the theatre of the Alaskan Eskimo, for
lack of easy comparison to western theatre models or concepts, was deemed
unacceptable and subsequently persecuted along with other Alaskan Eskimo
cultural traditional practices.
Today, the Alaskan Eskimo theatre tradition in
practice exists only in traditional social dancing, and in increasingly
infrequent and fragmented ceremonial presentations. The theatre tradition of
the Alaskan Eskimo has been essentially destroyed after years of missionary
colonization, another victim of western culture's inevitable invasion. What
does remain of this once vivid and complex theatre of the spirit world has been
relegated to anthropological and ethnohistorical record -- incomplete bits and
pieces of a theatre tradition, marginalized by a materialistic western culture
that values the empirical and written over the spiritual and oral traditions of
aboriginal people.
Not practiced widely since the turn of this century, this
orally transmitted theatre tradition still exists in the memory of some living
elders, but there too, as only a vague and fragmented memory with incomplete
meaning. After years of Christian indoctrination even those elders who might
remember choose to keep those memories hidden. To this day in several Alaskan
Eskimo villages the missionaries still forbid the performance of traditional
drums, singing or dancing even for benign entertainment, denying these villages
the slightest continuity with their traditional past.
The meaning of Alaskan
Eskimo theatre resided and thrived as do oral traditions, by its living
practice. Written Alaskan Eskimo language is only a recent occurrence, and with
the written has come a further removal from the living, breathing past/present
that only an oral tradition can embody. It was this dynamic reality of a
living, oral tradition that made their theatre tradition vital, ephemeral and
because of discontinuity, nearly lost to today.
The fragments of performance records that do exist are scattered about and
between the lines of the Alaskan Eskimo cultural history, indicating a profound
and highly sophisticated theatre tradition, rich with tradition, song, dance,
masks, puppets, costumes and scenography. It was theatre that was developed
over a period of nearly three thousand years. It was a theatre unlike any other
in the world, and antithetical to western theatre, in purpose, substance,
methodology and execution.
from Traditional
Alaskan Eskimo Theatre: Performing Spirits of the Earth