Inuksuit are deliberately stones and piles of stones, deliberately placed, and found throughout the circumpolar world. In his color photographs, Hallendy records some of these constructions, which have fascinated him during his 40 years of travels throughout the Arctic. His text describes the lasting friendships he developed with a number of Inuit elders, the nuances and complexities of inuksuit communication forms, and the particulars of the sites he photographed. This is a paperbound edition of a 1990 book. Annotation c. Book News, Inc., Portland, OR (booknews.com)
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Norman Hallendy is an Arctic researcher, writer, photographer, designer, artist and chronicler of Inuit life and landscapes. A traveller in the Arctic for over forty years who speaks fluent Inuktitut, he is director of the Tukilik Foundation. He lives outside Carp, Ontario.
Anyone who has been to Canada lately may have seen them on T-shirts and cap visors: the obviously human-made rock constructions called inuksuit by their creators. In word and picture, Hallendy puts them into their context, the vast open land of the arctic, where they mark places both mundane and sacred, good fishing sites and doors to the otherworld. He introduces the various categories of them, from elementary directional "deconfusers" to windows framing significant places. But he offers more than a taxonomy of arctic stones and a collection of stirring and evocative photographs of them in situ. He furnishes a doorway to the spiritual and cultural realities of the builders of the inuksuit, whose name means simply "the people." These Inuit have been Hallendy's teachers for almost 40 years, and he has been their respectful, curious student. His descriptions of their land and his renderings of their teachings are simply and starkly poetic. In one of the most moving passages, one of Hallendy's teachers, Osuitok, offers some spiritual grist: "Our minds move from thought to thought, hardly stopping to turn one over to see what the underside looks like." To the Inuit, their standing stones are a way of focusing and "deconfusing" the mind, so that the underside of the world may become tangible. Patricia Monaghan
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