The Trickster and the Engineer
Permanent lenke
https://hdl.handle.net/10037/14003Dato
2018-07Type
Journal articleTidsskriftartikkel
Peer reviewed
Forfatter
Fredriksen, Lill ToveSammendrag
In the beginning of the 2000’s a meeting takes place at one of the major hospitals in
Northern Norway, between a Sámi patient Juvvá, and his roommate, a retired Norwegian
engineer. The engineer shows a negative attitude towards his Sámi roommate. Based on
a symptomatic reading of three stories, this article presents a character analysis of
Juvvá’s birgengoansttat, coping skills, in his encounter with the engineer. The analysis
focuses on Juvvá as a trickster figure representing the Sámi people, and the engineer as
stállu, a set of structures that represent the majority’s values system. The engineer’s
negative mindset towards his Sámi roommate represents the shadow of centuries of
repression and lack of knowledge about Sámi language, culture and history. The
Norwegian government’s assimilation politics, the Norwegianization policies, function
as the contextual backdrop for the investigation and of the reactions of the engineer. In
my role as a scholar and mediator of the stories, I also function as a character in this
investigation, at a meta level. This requires some focus on the context that frames my
reading. The analysis of the stories reveals how non-verbal communication and humor
are used to show resistance towards derogatory attitudes in the majority system. Juvvá’s
agency is to cope, and take control of his own situation in the narrative of the hospital’s
white world. In his role as a trickster, Juvvá represents a boundary-crossing figure and
demonstrates a flexibility in finding a creative space to exercise his abilities to coping in
the meeting with his hostile roommate.
Beskrivelse
Source at: https://doi.org/10.7557/13.4417