Decolonizing production healing, belonging, and social change in sápmi
Permanent link
https://hdl.handle.net/10037/28371Date
2022-07-06Type
Journal articleTidsskriftartikkel
Peer reviewed
Abstract
The theory and practice of decolonization present an awkward paradox: How can social change occur in everyday life to disrupt
state structures while entangled with the mundane, social, and institutional practices and representations that perpetuate state
power? In Sápmi, the transborder Indigenous Sámi homeland, decolonization has been intertwined with the institutionalization of
Sámi governance and cultural reclamation through national governing bodies. In the Finnish-controlled regions, failures of national
recognition of Sámi self-determination have fueled disenchantment with established political platforms and a growing movement to
enact self-representation outside these realms. A study of Sámi craft making uncovers embodied mechanisms of decolonization,
actualized through production as fluid boundary making and intergenerational healing. Craft makers reinforce relationships to land
and family networks in ways that unsettle racialized and legal delineations of community belonging, redirecting the power of representation away from state-constrained decision-making bodies and toward everyday Sámi practice. In doing so, they also negotiate
their own use of rejected tropes and colonial networks of production. This interplay establishes the transformative potential and
constraints of an embodied decolonization.
Publisher
University of Chicago PressCitation
Magnani, Magnani. Decolonizing production healing, belonging, and social change in sápmi. Current Anthropology. 2022;63(4):386-406Metadata
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