Indigenous rituals re-make the larger than human community

Within the context of the annual Sami organized Riddu Riđđu festival (in western Sapmi/Arctic Norway) and the London-based biennial ORIGINS Festival of First Nations, Indigenous actors, musicians, artists, film-makers, chefs, storytellers and other performers draw on the resources of customary cerem...

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Main Author: Harvey, Graham
Other Authors: Houseman, Michael, Pike, Sarah, Salomonsen, Jone
Format: Book Part
Language:unknown
Published: Bloomsbury 2020
Subjects:
Online Access:https://oro.open.ac.uk/72502/
https://oro.open.ac.uk/72502/1/4%20Harvey.docx
https://oro.open.ac.uk/72502/3/9781350123045.ch-004.pdf
https://doi.org/10.5040/9781350123045.ch-004
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spelling ftopenunivgb:oai:oro.open.ac.uk:72502 2023-06-11T04:09:47+02:00 Indigenous rituals re-make the larger than human community Harvey, Graham Harvey, Graham Houseman, Michael Pike, Sarah Salomonsen, Jone 2020-10-01 application/vnd.openxmlformats-officedocument.wordprocessingml.document application/pdf https://oro.open.ac.uk/72502/ https://oro.open.ac.uk/72502/1/4%20Harvey.docx https://oro.open.ac.uk/72502/3/9781350123045.ch-004.pdf https://doi.org/10.5040/9781350123045.ch-004 unknown Bloomsbury https://oro.open.ac.uk/72502/1/4%20Harvey.docx https://oro.open.ac.uk/72502/3/9781350123045.ch-004.pdf Harvey, Graham <http://oro.open.ac.uk/view/person/gh2744.html> (2020). Indigenous rituals re-make the larger than human community. In: Harvey, Graham; Houseman, Michael; Pike, Sarah and Salomonsen, Jone eds. Reassembling Democracy: Ritual as Cultural Resource. London: Bloomsbury, pp. 69–85. Book Section Public PeerReviewed 2020 ftopenunivgb https://doi.org/10.5040/9781350123045.ch-004 2023-05-28T06:04:16Z Within the context of the annual Sami organized Riddu Riđđu festival (in western Sapmi/Arctic Norway) and the London-based biennial ORIGINS Festival of First Nations, Indigenous actors, musicians, artists, film-makers, chefs, storytellers and other performers draw on the resources of customary ceremonies and protocols to present work to audiences. Inspired by critical studies of Indigenous literatures, Harvey considers movements between and among international Indigenous performers and their ideas, inspirations, expectations and aspirations. Specific moments in performances and conversations during the festivals are brought into dialogue with notions of personhood that could be summed up as ‘dividualism’ and ‘new animism’. In the former, persons are not points or positions in a structure but inherently and necessarily relations. Beings become persons precisely by engaging and interacting with others. Rather than considering identities, dividual or relational personhood points to the definitive value of performance and interaction. The ‘new animism’ emphasizes that humans are in no way separate from other persons. They do not exist in a distinct environment but are made up of relations involving both human and other-than-human persons, all with needs and fears, some of which conflict with those of others. Indigenous performances draw on customary rites and knowledges which convey a pervasive (and definitively Indigenous) assumption of a larger-than-human community. Reassembling thoughts and practices related to ‘democracy’, in this perspective, necessitates consideration of relations with mountains, rivers, salmon, ancestors, masks and many others. Harvey argues that entertainment and education fuse within these festivals as Indigenous performers seek to inspire ‘world-making’ that is more inclusive and thus more democratic in a more-than-human world. Book Part Arctic First Nations sami Sapmi The Open University: Open Research Online (ORO) Arctic Norway
institution Open Polar
collection The Open University: Open Research Online (ORO)
op_collection_id ftopenunivgb
language unknown
description Within the context of the annual Sami organized Riddu Riđđu festival (in western Sapmi/Arctic Norway) and the London-based biennial ORIGINS Festival of First Nations, Indigenous actors, musicians, artists, film-makers, chefs, storytellers and other performers draw on the resources of customary ceremonies and protocols to present work to audiences. Inspired by critical studies of Indigenous literatures, Harvey considers movements between and among international Indigenous performers and their ideas, inspirations, expectations and aspirations. Specific moments in performances and conversations during the festivals are brought into dialogue with notions of personhood that could be summed up as ‘dividualism’ and ‘new animism’. In the former, persons are not points or positions in a structure but inherently and necessarily relations. Beings become persons precisely by engaging and interacting with others. Rather than considering identities, dividual or relational personhood points to the definitive value of performance and interaction. The ‘new animism’ emphasizes that humans are in no way separate from other persons. They do not exist in a distinct environment but are made up of relations involving both human and other-than-human persons, all with needs and fears, some of which conflict with those of others. Indigenous performances draw on customary rites and knowledges which convey a pervasive (and definitively Indigenous) assumption of a larger-than-human community. Reassembling thoughts and practices related to ‘democracy’, in this perspective, necessitates consideration of relations with mountains, rivers, salmon, ancestors, masks and many others. Harvey argues that entertainment and education fuse within these festivals as Indigenous performers seek to inspire ‘world-making’ that is more inclusive and thus more democratic in a more-than-human world.
author2 Harvey, Graham
Houseman, Michael
Pike, Sarah
Salomonsen, Jone
format Book Part
author Harvey, Graham
spellingShingle Harvey, Graham
Indigenous rituals re-make the larger than human community
author_facet Harvey, Graham
author_sort Harvey, Graham
title Indigenous rituals re-make the larger than human community
title_short Indigenous rituals re-make the larger than human community
title_full Indigenous rituals re-make the larger than human community
title_fullStr Indigenous rituals re-make the larger than human community
title_full_unstemmed Indigenous rituals re-make the larger than human community
title_sort indigenous rituals re-make the larger than human community
publisher Bloomsbury
publishDate 2020
url https://oro.open.ac.uk/72502/
https://oro.open.ac.uk/72502/1/4%20Harvey.docx
https://oro.open.ac.uk/72502/3/9781350123045.ch-004.pdf
https://doi.org/10.5040/9781350123045.ch-004
geographic Arctic
Norway
geographic_facet Arctic
Norway
genre Arctic
First Nations
sami
Sapmi
genre_facet Arctic
First Nations
sami
Sapmi
op_relation https://oro.open.ac.uk/72502/1/4%20Harvey.docx
https://oro.open.ac.uk/72502/3/9781350123045.ch-004.pdf
Harvey, Graham <http://oro.open.ac.uk/view/person/gh2744.html> (2020). Indigenous rituals re-make the larger than human community. In: Harvey, Graham; Houseman, Michael; Pike, Sarah and Salomonsen, Jone eds. Reassembling Democracy: Ritual as Cultural Resource. London: Bloomsbury, pp. 69–85.
op_doi https://doi.org/10.5040/9781350123045.ch-004
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