The Usually Invisible, Occasionally Visible, Spirits of the Dead in Early Twentieth-Century Sámi Folklore

Turn-of-twentieth-century Sámi concepts of spirits of the dead are presented along with accounts of those exceptional individuals able to see, hear, interact with, and sometimes control them, particularly persons termed noaideslágáš, i.e., skilled in noaidi arts. Examples and analysis are drawn from...

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Published in:Humanities
Main Author: Thomas A. DuBois
Format: Text
Language:English
Published: Multidisciplinary Digital Publishing Institute 2023
Subjects:
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.3390/h12050094
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spelling ftmdpi:oai:mdpi.com:/2076-0787/12/5/94/ 2023-10-09T21:52:54+02:00 The Usually Invisible, Occasionally Visible, Spirits of the Dead in Early Twentieth-Century Sámi Folklore Thomas A. DuBois 2023-09-07 application/pdf https://doi.org/10.3390/h12050094 eng eng Multidisciplinary Digital Publishing Institute https://dx.doi.org/10.3390/h12050094 https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ Humanities Volume 12 Issue 5 Pages: 94 Sámi people Johan Turi folklore Text 2023 ftmdpi https://doi.org/10.3390/h12050094 2023-09-10T23:55:06Z Turn-of-twentieth-century Sámi concepts of spirits of the dead are presented along with accounts of those exceptional individuals able to see, hear, interact with, and sometimes control them, particularly persons termed noaideslágáš, i.e., skilled in noaidi arts. Examples and analysis are drawn from the writings of Sámi author and scholar Johan Turi (1854–1936), contemporaneous accounts recorded by Norwegian folklorist Just Qvigstad (1853–1957), the fieldwork of Sámi legislator, educator, and folklore collector Isak Saba (1875–1921), and an 1886 anthology of Aanaar (Inari) Sámi folklore. Described with varying names and sometimes contradicting accounts, the spirits of the dead in Sámi culture during the early twentieth century could be used to protect or enhance the fortunes of the living, but could also play roles in situations of disease, misfortune, and interpersonal conflict. The various narratives recorded in the period reflect a complex fusion of Indigenous Sámi traditions with ideas stemming from various Christian denominations and the belief legends of non-Sámi neighbors in the Finnish, Norwegian, Russian and Swedish sides of Sápmi—the Sámi homeland. Spirits of the dead figure as potent, expectable, but sometimes unpredictable elements of daily life—beings that could help or harm, depending on how they were dealt with by those with whom they came in contact and those who could wield power over them, particularly noaiddit, Sámi ritual and healing specialists. Text Inari Sámi Sámi MDPI Open Access Publishing Inari ENVELOPE(27.029,27.029,68.906,68.906) Saba ENVELOPE(149.417,149.417,66.617,66.617) Humanities 12 5 94
institution Open Polar
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language English
topic Sámi people
Johan Turi
folklore
spellingShingle Sámi people
Johan Turi
folklore
Thomas A. DuBois
The Usually Invisible, Occasionally Visible, Spirits of the Dead in Early Twentieth-Century Sámi Folklore
topic_facet Sámi people
Johan Turi
folklore
description Turn-of-twentieth-century Sámi concepts of spirits of the dead are presented along with accounts of those exceptional individuals able to see, hear, interact with, and sometimes control them, particularly persons termed noaideslágáš, i.e., skilled in noaidi arts. Examples and analysis are drawn from the writings of Sámi author and scholar Johan Turi (1854–1936), contemporaneous accounts recorded by Norwegian folklorist Just Qvigstad (1853–1957), the fieldwork of Sámi legislator, educator, and folklore collector Isak Saba (1875–1921), and an 1886 anthology of Aanaar (Inari) Sámi folklore. Described with varying names and sometimes contradicting accounts, the spirits of the dead in Sámi culture during the early twentieth century could be used to protect or enhance the fortunes of the living, but could also play roles in situations of disease, misfortune, and interpersonal conflict. The various narratives recorded in the period reflect a complex fusion of Indigenous Sámi traditions with ideas stemming from various Christian denominations and the belief legends of non-Sámi neighbors in the Finnish, Norwegian, Russian and Swedish sides of Sápmi—the Sámi homeland. Spirits of the dead figure as potent, expectable, but sometimes unpredictable elements of daily life—beings that could help or harm, depending on how they were dealt with by those with whom they came in contact and those who could wield power over them, particularly noaiddit, Sámi ritual and healing specialists.
format Text
author Thomas A. DuBois
author_facet Thomas A. DuBois
author_sort Thomas A. DuBois
title The Usually Invisible, Occasionally Visible, Spirits of the Dead in Early Twentieth-Century Sámi Folklore
title_short The Usually Invisible, Occasionally Visible, Spirits of the Dead in Early Twentieth-Century Sámi Folklore
title_full The Usually Invisible, Occasionally Visible, Spirits of the Dead in Early Twentieth-Century Sámi Folklore
title_fullStr The Usually Invisible, Occasionally Visible, Spirits of the Dead in Early Twentieth-Century Sámi Folklore
title_full_unstemmed The Usually Invisible, Occasionally Visible, Spirits of the Dead in Early Twentieth-Century Sámi Folklore
title_sort usually invisible, occasionally visible, spirits of the dead in early twentieth-century sámi folklore
publisher Multidisciplinary Digital Publishing Institute
publishDate 2023
url https://doi.org/10.3390/h12050094
long_lat ENVELOPE(27.029,27.029,68.906,68.906)
ENVELOPE(149.417,149.417,66.617,66.617)
geographic Inari
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genre Inari Sámi
Sámi
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op_source Humanities
Volume 12
Issue 5
Pages: 94
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