Permafrost Is an Archive

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1876
A01=Corinna Cook
Aishik Culture
Alaska
Alaska-Canada Highway
Alaska-Yukon
Alaskan wilderness
Alcan
archive
arctic
Arctic Alaska
atlatl
Atlin
Author_Corinna Cook
backcountry
Bancroft Library
bedrock
Bennett Lake Culture
black spruce
blades
border studies
borderlands
Boreal forest
boreal forest conservation
Canada
caribou
Category=WN
Chooutla
Constance Baltuk
core samples
Dene language
Derrick Burleson
Doug Smarch
Douglas Island
ekphrastic
eq_isMigrated=1
eq_isMigrated=2
eq_new_release
eq_nobargain
fjordlands
Flint Hills
food security
George Davidson
glacier
government documents
gravina
Gravina Belt
Great Plains
Haines
ice partch
icefield
Indian Act
Indian Mission School
Juneau
Kansasa
Kobuk
Kohklux Map
Kohlux
landslide
limestone
mapmakers
melting
melting permafrost
Metis
microblade
migration
Missouri
Nemaha Range
palsa
permafrost
Permafrost Lab
PrairyErth
Quarternary
rainforest
Raven Biome
Saint Elias Range
Southern Lakes Region
subarctic
Swan Haven
swans
T'aaku Kwaan
terrane maps
Teslin
Tlingit
tlingit people
Truth and Reconciliation
Truth and Reconciliation Commission
Turtle Island
Umbrella Final Agreement
White River Ash
Whitehorse
William Least Heat-Moon
winter
YFN
YFN 101
Yukon
Yukon Arts Centre
Yukon First Nation
Yukon Ice Patch

Product details

  • ISBN 9781959000709
  • Dimensions: 140 x 210mm
  • Publication Date: 24 Feb 2026
  • Publisher: West Virginia University Press
  • Publication City/Country: US
  • Product Form: Paperback
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The Yukon Ice Patch Project reveals ancient lives. A road through the boreal forest reads like a map of climate upheaval. Those houses with broken doorknobs—a legacy of government regulation over Indigenous life. Corinna Cook, who was born white on Áak'w Kwáan Tlingit land in Juneau, Alaska, wrestles with the past and future into Canada's Yukon Territory. With writing that blends research and reverie, her essays ask how we might come into right relations with our most difficult, shared histories. How can we carry the past together, in a good way, as the land melts? The answers—elusive as they are—carry global resonance, taking shape through a deeply personal lens combined with careful study of local arts, artifacts, maps, and the land we depend on.

Corinna Cook is the author of the essay collection Leavetakings. Her writing appears in PloughsharesAlaska Quarterly ReviewAssay: A Journal of Nonfiction Studies, and elsewhere. A former Fulbright Fellow, Corinna's writing has also received support from the National Endowment for the Humanities, the Rasmuson Foundation, the Alaska State Council on the Arts, and an Alaska Literary Award. Corinna is a graduate of Pomona College and holds a PhD in English and creative writing from the University of Missouri. She teaches nonfiction in Alaska Pacific University's low-residency MFA program in creative writing and lives in Juneau, Alaska.

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