Ernestine Ygnacio-De Soto Explained

Ernestine Ygnacio-De Soto
Birth Date:ca. 1938
Birth Place:Santa Cruz, California
Occupation:cultural advisor, author, nurse
Children:5
Mother:Mary Yee

Ernestine Ygnacio-De Soto (born 1938/1939)[1] is an author, cultural advisor, and former nurse of Barbareño Chumash descent. She is active in documenting the Barbareño Chumash language. Additionally, she has worked as an illustrator and Chumash historian.

Early life

Ygnacio-De Soto was born circa 1938 in Santa Cruz, California.[2] She is the daughter of Mary Yee (1897–1965), who was the last first language speaker of the Chumashan language, Barbareño.[3] She grew up listening to native speakers of the language and therefore serves as a direct living link to that extinct language family.[4]

Her ancestors lived near the area of Painted Cave, California. Some of her family stories, including stories by her maternal great grandmother Luisa Ygnacio, were documented by ethnologist John Peabody Harrington.

Career

Ygnacio-De Soto has worked closely with archivist John Johnson for over a decade, in documenting family memories and Barbareño Chumash cultural traditions in to writing. They became friends when Johnson was writing his PhD thesis on Chumash marriage and family patterns.

Ygnacio-De Soto was the illustrator of a children's book which tells one of her mother's cultural stories, The Sugar Bear Story (2005), published by Sunbelt Publications in conjunction with the Anthropology Department of the Santa Barbara Museum of Natural History.[5]

In 2009, she helped to co-write a documentary film script with John R. Johnson. The film, 6 Generations: A Chumash Family's History (2010) is about her family's history and was produced by filmmaker Paul Goldsmith.[6] [7] It has been reviewed in the Journal of California and Great Basin Anthropology.[8] The 6 Generations film won several awards at the Archaeology Channel International Film and Video Festival (2012); including Best Film; Best Script; Special Mention, Increasing the Awareness of the Ethnographic Record; and Audience Favorite.

She spoke out in 2019 against a project by the Bacara Resort in Santa Barbara, which aimed to build bathrooms in an area that holds sacred Chumash graves.[9]

The United States National Park Service has devoted a web page to her commentary on Scott O'Dell's book, Island of the Blue Dolphins (1960), in Chapter 7.

Additionally, she has worked as a nurse at a Santa Barbara rest home.

Publications

See also

External links

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Chawkins. Steve. 2010-01-31. Researcher Gave the Chumash a Gift: Their Heritage . 2021-11-13. Los Angeles Times. en-US.
  2. News: Dallow . Lily . Meet Fiesta’s 2023 Grand Marshal: Ernestine Ygnacio-De Soto, Barbareño Chumash Elder . 5 August 2024 . Noozhawk . July 31, 2023.
  3. Web site: Ygnacio-De Soto . Island of the Blue Dolphins . . 2020-04-23.
  4. Book: Kennedy, Frances H.. American Indian Places: A Historical Guidebook. 2008. Houghton Mifflin Company. 978-0-395-63336-6. 298. en.
  5. Newsletter . Newsletter . 24. 2005. The Society for the Study of the Indigenous Languages of the Americas . 14. en .
  6. Web site: Kettmann. Matt. 2009-11-12. Two Centuries of Chumash. 2021-11-13. The Santa Barbara Independent. en-US.
  7. Hurst Thomas. David. 2011-02-01. Listening to Six Generations of Chumash Women (Goldsmith, Soto, Johnson, Edwards, Walden, and Johnson's). Current Anthropology. 52. 1. 127–128. 10.1086/657926. 224791797 . 0011-3204.
  8. Farris, Glenn. "6 Generations: A Chumash Family's History" (film review), Journal of California and Great Basin Anthropology, 30(2), 2010
  9. News: Yamamura. Jean. October 12, 2019. Bacara Beach Bathroom Battle Lines Form: Move Farther Up the Beach Could Endanger Grave Sites, Chumash Contend. Santa Barbara Independent. March 23, 2021.