Fonneland, Trude

Memory Institutions and Sámi Heritage Decolonization, Restitution, and Rematriation in Sápmi - Oxford Taylor & Francis 2024 - 1 electronic resource (286 p.) - Memory Studies: Global Constellations .

Open Access

With a focus on Sápmi – the transcultural and transnational homeland of the Sámi people – this book presents case studies and theoretical frameworks which explore the ways in which memory institutions such as museums, archives, and festivals participate in and guide processes of appropriation, decolonization, and memory-making. The destruction and concealment of Sámi objects in both private and museum collections worldwide have impacted Sámi knowledge systems, disrupting local ways of knowing. Appreciation and reappropriation are important acts of decolonization which seek to create openings for reconnection to traditions, languages, and practices that were forcibly suppressed in the past. Western memory institutions such as museums, archives, and galleries have had a great impact on how heritage has been collected, stored, conserved, and organized within closed walls and glass cases. As the new museology movement developed in the 1990s, numerous examples revealed how difficult it became for researchers and public alike to access heritage. Considering the proliferation of cultural interventions and the growth of Sámi mobilization, which calls into question assumptions about how best to activate and experience Sámi cultural heritage and what constitutes appropriate stewardship, this book sheds light on initiatives to return artefacts to the Sámi community. With particular attention to the ways in which Sámi self-determination and the shifting boundaries between Indigenous and settler identities are articulated, challenged, and renegotiated, it draws on approaches from critical museology and Indigenous methodologies to explore the initiation, experience, and operationalizing of restitution projects. This book will therefore appeal to scholars of cultural studies, anthropology, sociology, and museum and heritage studies, as well as to those interested in questions of repatriation, restitution, and healing processes.


Creative Commons


English

9781003426318 9781040261866 9781040261880 9781032547176 9781032547190 9781003426318

10.4324/9781003426318 doi


Cultural studies
Colonialism and imperialism
Museology and heritage studies
Sociology
Ethnic studies

repatriation restitution appropriation heritage cultural heritage artefacts museums archives museology libraries Sami Norway Scandinavia case studies decolonisation decolonization Sápmi Sámi Sámi peoples healing anthropology sociology museum studies cultural studies