From Nature to iNature. Articulating a Sami Christian Identity Online.
Permanent link
https://hdl.handle.net/10037/4873Date
2012Type
Journal articleTidsskriftartikkel
Peer reviewed
Author
Olsen, Torjer AndreasAbstract
The article discusses the activities of both indigenous people and religion online, and introduces the pair of concepts indigeneity-online/online-indigeneity as a means of analysing this activity. This concept is new, and leans heavily on the pair of concepts religion-online/online-religion that is used in religious studies. The second part of the article consists of an analysis of the website www.osko.no, a site for the Christian education of Sami children and youth. I treat this as an expression of, or a medium for, the contemporary formation of Sami identity, and argue that it can be seen as an indigenous website. The Church of Norway, as an institution with a strong history of colonization and Norwegianization, has developed into an institution that seeks to integrate, implement and strengthen the Sami voices and traditions to such extent thatSami Christians use it as platform for the communication of a Sami kind of Christianity. www.osko.no is an example of a certain articulation of Sami identity. What seems to be the preferred or idealized Saminess is related to nature and a particular past, and is distant to modernity, urban culture and Norwegian culture.
Publisher
University of TromsøUniversitetet i Tromsø
Citation
Nordlit (2012) nr. 30 s. 157-170Metadata
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