Etnopolitiske utmaningar i historieformidling. Grunnforteljingar om samefolket i Noreg

The article discusses the place and the status of the Sami people in historical narratives in Norway. It focuses on history as a school subject but this focus can only be understood by looking at changes in contexts. Of special interest here is the presentations of the Sami in Norwegian textbooks, t...

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Main Author: Kvande, Lise
Format: Article in Journal/Newspaper
Language:Norwegian Nynorsk
Published: Karlstads Universitet 2015
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/11250/2630288
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spelling ftntnutrondheimi:oai:ntnuopen.ntnu.no:11250/2630288 2023-05-15T18:10:21+02:00 Etnopolitiske utmaningar i historieformidling. Grunnforteljingar om samefolket i Noreg Kvande, Lise 2015 http://hdl.handle.net/11250/2630288 nno nno Karlstads Universitet Nordidactica. 2015, (4), 86-105. urn:issn:2000-9879 http://hdl.handle.net/11250/2630288 cristin:1355137 86-105 Nordidactica 4 Journal article Peer reviewed 2015 ftntnutrondheimi 2019-11-27T14:09:24Z The article discusses the place and the status of the Sami people in historical narratives in Norway. It focuses on history as a school subject but this focus can only be understood by looking at changes in contexts. Of special interest here is the presentations of the Sami in Norwegian textbooks, the status of the Sami people in Norwegian society, and changes in the perspectives in historical research. History has played a significant role in the nation and state building processes in the Western countries, however in the last decades most European societies have seen immigration at a larger scale than before and, hence, new challenges concerning national identity and inclusion of new groups in the new histories of the nations. The indigenous people in Norway, the Sami, have lived both within and across the Norwegian borders. For centuries they were absent in the political and cultural narratives of Norway. After WW II they gradually achieved political recognition and legal rights but it was not until the 1970s they obtained space in Norwegian textbooks. The article shows how narratives about the Sami people have been presented and how they have changed in the last 40 years. The narratives first made the Sami visible, then they focused on the Sami as an object of oppression, and more recently they have presented the Sami as acting subjects in history. The question is not if, and to what extent, the Sami ought to be included in histories of Norway, but rather in what view the majority presents the indigenous people in the textbooks, for example. This discussion is relevant to debates on multiculturality in general and it also offers a deeper understanding of how history works in (ethno)political contexts. publishedVersion Open Access Article in Journal/Newspaper sami sami NTNU Open Archive (Norwegian University of Science and Technology) Norway
institution Open Polar
collection NTNU Open Archive (Norwegian University of Science and Technology)
op_collection_id ftntnutrondheimi
language Norwegian Nynorsk
description The article discusses the place and the status of the Sami people in historical narratives in Norway. It focuses on history as a school subject but this focus can only be understood by looking at changes in contexts. Of special interest here is the presentations of the Sami in Norwegian textbooks, the status of the Sami people in Norwegian society, and changes in the perspectives in historical research. History has played a significant role in the nation and state building processes in the Western countries, however in the last decades most European societies have seen immigration at a larger scale than before and, hence, new challenges concerning national identity and inclusion of new groups in the new histories of the nations. The indigenous people in Norway, the Sami, have lived both within and across the Norwegian borders. For centuries they were absent in the political and cultural narratives of Norway. After WW II they gradually achieved political recognition and legal rights but it was not until the 1970s they obtained space in Norwegian textbooks. The article shows how narratives about the Sami people have been presented and how they have changed in the last 40 years. The narratives first made the Sami visible, then they focused on the Sami as an object of oppression, and more recently they have presented the Sami as acting subjects in history. The question is not if, and to what extent, the Sami ought to be included in histories of Norway, but rather in what view the majority presents the indigenous people in the textbooks, for example. This discussion is relevant to debates on multiculturality in general and it also offers a deeper understanding of how history works in (ethno)political contexts. publishedVersion Open Access
format Article in Journal/Newspaper
author Kvande, Lise
spellingShingle Kvande, Lise
Etnopolitiske utmaningar i historieformidling. Grunnforteljingar om samefolket i Noreg
author_facet Kvande, Lise
author_sort Kvande, Lise
title Etnopolitiske utmaningar i historieformidling. Grunnforteljingar om samefolket i Noreg
title_short Etnopolitiske utmaningar i historieformidling. Grunnforteljingar om samefolket i Noreg
title_full Etnopolitiske utmaningar i historieformidling. Grunnforteljingar om samefolket i Noreg
title_fullStr Etnopolitiske utmaningar i historieformidling. Grunnforteljingar om samefolket i Noreg
title_full_unstemmed Etnopolitiske utmaningar i historieformidling. Grunnforteljingar om samefolket i Noreg
title_sort etnopolitiske utmaningar i historieformidling. grunnforteljingar om samefolket i noreg
publisher Karlstads Universitet
publishDate 2015
url http://hdl.handle.net/11250/2630288
geographic Norway
geographic_facet Norway
genre sami
sami
genre_facet sami
sami
op_source 86-105
Nordidactica
4
op_relation Nordidactica. 2015, (4), 86-105.
urn:issn:2000-9879
http://hdl.handle.net/11250/2630288
cristin:1355137
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