Russiske kvinner i Nord-Norge: fortellinger om soppturer og Sovjettid
Permanent link
https://hdl.handle.net/10037/10584Date
2016-10Type
Journal articleTidsskriftartikkel
Peer reviewed
Author
Wara, TatianaAbstract
The article portrays and discusses various reorientation practices used by Russian women
who have migrated to the Finnmark region in Northern Norway. It draws on participant
observation, individual interviews and focus group interviews. The fieldwork revealed that
mushroom related activites picking, talking about, preparing and eating constitute an
important part of a shared Russian heritage accumulated through a communist-era
childhood. The article makes particular use of Floya Anthias’ concept of translocal positioning.
Anthias conceptualizes social positioning as a practice that occurrs within and across
both concrete locations and cultural contexts, and is shaped by specific processes of
minoritizing and majoritizing. Through the perspective of translocation, and inspired by
Merleau-Ponty’s phenomenology of the body (1994), this article aims to show how my
informants position themselves as Russian women in Finnmark. Based on an analysis of
the experiences and practices related to mushrooms, the article argues that migrants’
reorientations may fruitfully be viewed as practices that are constituted through the body
across time and space.
Description
Published version. Source at http://dx.doi.org/10.17585/nof.v30.430