Monument og minne. Mobilisering av fortid - argument for fremtid?
Permanent lenke
https://hdl.handle.net/10037/4201Dato
2007Type
Journal articleTidsskriftartikkel
Peer reviewed
Forfatter
Aarekol, LenaSammendrag
In 1977 a monument in memory of the Finnish immigrants was erected in Vadsø, the capital town of the county of Finnmark. The unveiling ceremony of the monument was an exceptional event, where the Norwegian king Olav, the Swedish king Carl Gustav and the Finnish president Uhro Kekkonen attended. The purpose of the monument was to pay tribute to the Finnish immigrants and their contribution to the North Norwegian communities. These immigrants were also known as Kven, an old Scandinavian term for people with a Finnish cultural background who moved to North Norway in the eighteenth and nineteenth centuries.
By going back to the memorial-making process, I have reinvested the monument with the memory of its acquired past. It is argued that the construction of the monument in Vadsø was not only a kind of reconstruction of the past and a kind of public mnemonic technique, but also a contribution to the discourse about the present and the future. This monument may be seen as a process where the immigrant’s identity was tied to the place, both the geographical space and as an ethnic group in a multiethnic society. The monument may also be interpreted as a first “battle” to draw attention to the Kvens, and a first attempt to revitalize Kven culture and identity.
Beskrivelse
This article is part of Lena Aarekol's doctoral thesis, which is available in Munin at http://hdl.handle.net/10037/2596
Forlag
Novus ForlagSitering
Tidsskrift for kulturforskning 6(2007) nr. 4 s. 5-23Metadata
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