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Crude Conversations

EP 144 Deconstructing the myth of The Last Frontier with Kaitlin Armstrong

Crude Conversations

crudemag

Society & Culture

5884 Ratings

🗓️ 7 January 2024

⏱️ 74 minutes

🧾️ Download transcript

Summary

In this one, Cody talks to Kaitlin Armstrong. She’s the host of The Alaska Myth, a podcast that deconstructs the stories created during the Russian settlement and European colonization of Alaska that began in the mid-1700s. Utopian settler stories, stories of the rugged outdoors, ones of monetary opportunity and ones of lawlessness. These stories — often embellished or completely fabricated — have informed the Alaskan identity and sense of place for generations. Meanwhile, overlooking or ignoring the history and the lifeways of the many Alaska Native cultures. Kaitlin says that she’s been thinking about all of this for years, about how the idea of The Last Frontier is subtle and insidious because of what it hides. On the surface, these stories are ones of can-do spirit and gritty individualism, stories that reinforce our idea of Alaskan pride. But underneath all of that, there’s violence, resource extraction and the erasure of Native peoples and their cultures. Kaitlin grew up in Homer, Alaska. There, she says she had an idyllic upbringing in the small, tight-knit community. But her understanding of what goes into creating this idyllic place changed over the years. That the land had to be conquered first and then it could be made into the place she grew up in. That knowledge and curiosity extended to her own Honduran heritage, of which she knew little about as a kid. Because, for so long, it was just too difficult for her mom to talk about. But every summer, Kaitlin’s grandma would visit and she would connect with her heritage through her. But, Kaitlin says, she always felt more Alaskan than anything else.

Transcript

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0:00.0

Welcome to the show. In this one I talked to Caitlin Armstrong. She's the host of the Alaska

0:17.9

Myth, a podcast that deconstructs the stories created during the Russian settlement and European colonization of Alaska

0:26.3

that began in the mid-17 hundreds. Utopian settler stories. Stories of the rugged outdoors, ones of monetary opportunity, and

0:35.8

ones of lawlessness.

0:38.3

These stories, often embellished or completely fabricated, have informed the Alaskan identity and sense of place for generations.

0:47.0

Meanwhile, overlooking or ignoring the history and the lifeways of the many Alaska native cultures.

0:54.8

Caitlin says that she's been thinking about all of this for years,

0:58.7

about how the idea of the last frontier is subtle and insidious because of what it hides. On the surface

1:05.3

these stories are ones of can-do spirit and gritty individualism, stories that

1:10.7

reinforce our idea of Alaskan pride. But underneath stories that of Native peoples and their cultures.

1:24.0

This podcast is made possible through the generous support of the crude magazine Patreon subscribers.

1:30.0

If you already subscribe to the crude magazine, Patreon, thank you.

1:34.0

For those listeners who aren't, please consider subscribing at

1:38.0

Patreon.com slash crude magazine.

1:42.0

That's Patreon.com slash crude magazine and pick the

1:47.8

subscription tier that works for you. I want to thank everyone subscribed at

1:52.2

the company Mantier.

1:54.0

These are the people who have subscribed to the crude Patreon for $50 or more.

1:58.8

Trina Dober.

2:00.7

Seward Brewing Company, The Grind Coffee Shop in Juno, Derek Adolf, Sharon Liska, Jake Liska,

2:10.5

Alaska Surf Adventure, and Borderline Legacy.

2:14.0

Thank you to all the Patreon subscribers.

...

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