Catharine McClellan

Catharine “Kitty” McClellan (March 1, 1921 - March 3, 2009) is a cultural anthropologist who is renowned for her documentation of the oral history and storytelling typical of Athabascan speaking, Tlingit and Tagish peoples of the Yukon Territory. Catharine’s work extended past her academic research, as she became close to the communities she worked in she also became an advocate for their rights on issues such as the Mackenzie Valley Pipeline debate in 1976. Her husband was fellow anthropologist John Hitchcock whom she married in 1974; he died in 2001 from natural health complications.[1]

Biography

Catharine was born in York, PA, lived throughout the United States and Yukon Territory throughout the course of her life, and died in Peterborough, New Hampshire. She did extensive work in the Yukon from the 1950s to 1980s, where she conducted a detailed research study using their traditional oral stories as research material to study the Aboriginal peoples in the Yukon. Though it was not her initial intention upon arriving in the North to document the lives of the Athabascan peoples in narrative story form, it quickly became a dominant part of her work. For over 30 years she worked as a scholar and close companion with many northern individuals as they used their traditional stories to instruct and guide her work. Storytelling is very important to the Yukon peoples, and her work helped document and preserve such diverse linguistic and cultural history.[1]

According to the lengthy obituary written by Julie Cruikshank in American Anthropology Catharine was incredibly humble about the impact of her Northern research. Her work became incredibly important for applied anthropology in the future,[1] though she never defined it as such. She was one of the first to dedicate so much of her research to northern oral tradition, and in doing so, she helped pragmatically standardize the rules for transcribing oral history.[2]

Catharine’s attitude towards her Northern research was inherently feminist, however she denied any claims of such motivation driving her work against the rigor of a paternalistic discipline, nor did she participate in the feminist movement. She studied at Bryn Mawr college and spoke of her time there fondly; however it was not because of the solely-female enrollment, it was because of the stimulating education she received while there.[3]

She remained unmarried for the first twenty-five years of her career, yet even in her marriage to the cultural ecologist John Hitchcock, she remained independently driven to complete her own research. Their scholarly partnership began when they worked at the University of Wisconsin, Madison, together, though they were not romantically involved until years later.[3]

Education

Catharine graduated from her undergraduate degree in anthropology from Bryn Mawr College in 1942. From there she moved to California to study at the University of California, Berkeley beginning in 1946 where she was supervised by Robert Lowie. In 1947 with Frederica de Laguna, Catharine began traveling north to the Yukon to research the oral cultures of which she became increasingly interested in throughout her studies. In 1950, from a product of her research in the North, Catharine received her PhD from American MidWest University in anthropology.[4]

Fieldwork

Catharine’s research in the Yukon was characterized by her forerunner interest as an “outsider” documenting their oral tradition. However, it was not her original intent to document solely oral accounts. These initial interviews helped to encourage the precise documentation of particular transcripts of narrative accounts which allowed her to begin to identify the nature of differences among these traditional stories.

Her research relied on time-intensive work in the North as used oral interviews and many visits to the communities to gain both a proper relationship with her informants, such as Angela Sidney, as well as to act ethically as a participant observer.[3]

Her work on the manuscript for My People's Stories began in the 1980s, most were taken down between 1948 and 1952 and appear here as a collection of 175 narratives or cycles of narrative. Thirty-five were told by Southern Tutchone speakers— four men, eight women and one young girl. Seventy-eight were told by Tagish, three men and two women. The Inland Tlingit stories or cycles number sixty-two, told by nine men and seven women, and one young girl.[2]

Catharine collaborated with Frederica de Laguna in Angoon in 1950 as well as travelling North with her to conduct ethnological investigations at Yakutat in 1952, along with Francis A Riddell. In this ethnological work, the group discovered there were two individuals in the community who were native speakers of the nearly extinct Athabascan language Eyak.[5]

Catharine's early contribution to documenting oral tradition among the Aboriginal people of the Yukon has opened the region up to study from others. This includes Lynn Echevarria's recent research in Baha'i Storytelling. She explores similar stories and myths, though from the perspective of a recently introduced religion. Between 1960-1974, 205 people adopted the Baha'i faith. Many of the individuals maintained their oral storytelling traditions, and Echevarria's research ca. 2008 worked to document as much of this history as they could.[6] Echevarria credits the forerunner work done by Catharine and Julie Cruikshank, stating:

"their extensive work with Yukon First nations peoples have done much to show that Aboriginal oral narratives provide types of knowledge different from the western scientific model."[6]

Employment

Catharine was first employed in the U.S. Navy WAVES following graduation from Bryn Mawr for four years until attending University of California, Berkeley. She began working with the University of Washington in 1952 and until 1956 she remained with them while frequently visiting the Yukon as both a friend and scholar. She then held later positions at Barnard College from 1956 to 1961 and then moving to University of Wisconsin-Madison from 1961 to 1983 when she officially retired from professorship. She remained a Professor Emeriti there until her death.[7]

Her teaching style was unique, and though unstructured, it was comprehensive and multisensory in helping her students understand the way of life in the North. To illustrate important elements of the stories from her research, she would bring in tools, clothes, and weapons from both the Tlingit and Athapaskan peoples for her students. She would also insist her graduate students read Kroeber, Lowie, and de Laguna, as she worked closely with all of them in the prime of their careers.[3]

Catharine was also a visiting professor at Bryn Mawr College in 1954, the University of Missouri in 1962, University of Alaska twice in 1973 and again in 1987.[7]

Her professional positions which ranked her in high esteem include:

Colleagues/Influences

Throughout Catherine’s career she was influenced by a great number of significant mentors both as colleagues in the scholarly field of anthropology and while undergoing academic research. These individuals include:

Published works

Bibliography

References

  1. 1 2 3 Cruikshank, Julie. Obituary. American Anthropologist. 2010 (112:2)
  2. 1 2 McClellan, Catharine. My Old People’s Stories: A Legacy for Yukon First Nations. PART 1: Southern Tutchone Narrators. 2007.
  3. 1 2 3 4 Women Anthropologists: Selected Biographies. "Catharine McClellan" by Ann Stoler. pp. 246-51.
  4. York Daily Record. Obituary. 2009. http://www.anthropology.wisc.edu/pdfs/McClellan.pdf
  5. de Laguna, Frederica. Under Mount Saint Elias: The History and Culture of the Yakutat Tlingit: Part Three.
  6. 1 2 Echevarria, Lynn. "A New Skin for an Old Drum: Changing Contexts of Yukon Aboriginal Baha'i Storytelling." The Northern Review 29 (Fall 2008): 39-62.
  7. 1 2


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