File:Igorrote parade at the Alaska-Yukon-Pacific Exposition, 1909 - DPLA - 7fba095d72b696bfda8243bde7d0d8e3.jpg
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Summary
editIgorrote parade at the Alaska-Yukon-Pacific Exposition, 1909 ( ) | |||||||||||||||||||||
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Creator InfoField |
creator QS:P170,Q26202833 |
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Title |
Igorrote parade at the Alaska-Yukon-Pacific Exposition, 1909 |
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Description |
The Building on the left resembles the Alaska Building and the building in the center resembles the Fine Arts Building. Hawaii Building appears on the left. "Living Exhibits" (also sometimes called "Human Zoos") were a racist trademark of fairs and exhibitions during the 19th and 20th centuries during which people from other countries advertised as "primitive" or "exotic" were brought in by organizers to live on the fair grounds for attendees to observe. These exhibits were used by Western societies to create an "Other" and justify racist and harmful practices of colonialization and discrimination. This racism is on full display in the description of the village which appeared in the exposition's guidebook. From the Official guide to the Alaska-Yukon-Pacific Exposition: "Commandingly located at the head of the South Pay Streak, beneath of a roof of trees, is the picturesquely simple village of the barbaric Igorrotes, the interesting primitive and wild people from the remote mountain fastnesses of Luzon in the Philippine Archipelago. Here, in the greatest of all the special attractions, there are fifty of these strange head-hunting, dog-eating people, living as they live at home, in quaint grass-thatched huts, with their womenkind and cute little children. A bit of their own characteristic Bontoc country transplanted in Seattle to show exposition visitors the manners, customs, costumes, industries, sports and pastimes of a remarkable people in the childhood of a race, a wild, uncultured people, struggling to break through their environment and emerge from the superstitions which enslave them, and to solve the mysterious play of the forces of nature and rise to higher conceptions of truth of freedom and liberty. Within the great palisaded enclosure there is not one inch of space that does not vibrate with the wild life of the Igorrotes. Everything they make and use at home is made in the Village here, men fashioning keen spears and warlike head axes at a primitive forge, or weaving rattan into peculiar pocket hats which distinguish the Bontoc men from all other Islanders; men carving war shields with crude tools, and quiet turbaned men from Sebangan molding clay and brass pipes and ornamental metal chains. Women spinning and weaving cotton into the gaudy "gee-strings" worn by the warriors, as well as the gay cloths for their own simple but sufficient clothing; others beating and winnowing rice, and many of both sexes laboring in the remarkable "sementeras" which terrace the mountainside at the rear of the Village, where rice is grown under irrigation as practiced by them at home. All in all, it is the most extensive, interesting and amusing exhibit at the exposition." Fine Arts Building still extant 2022 as Architecture Hall. |
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Date |
1909 date QS:P571,+1909-00-00T00:00:00Z/9 |
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Collection |
institution QS:P195,Q7442157 |
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Permission (Reusing this file) |
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