Living by the River:Means, Meanings and Sense of Place

The chapter discusses the river’s central role for the residents of the small northern settlement in Sakha Yakutia (Northeastern Russia) and how living-by-the-river gives people more conscious thoughts on the distinctiveness of their “river place”. The Amma River has an iconic image as the region’s...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Stammler-Gossmann, Anna
Other Authors: Lehtimäki, Markku, Rosenholm, Arja, Trubina, Elena, Tynkkynen, Nina
Format: Book Part
Language:English
Published: Springer 2022
Subjects:
Online Access:https://research.ulapland.fi/fi/publications/fbb995e8-8bcc-43b4-a891-c8debe53e866
https://doi.org/10.1007/978-3-031-10149-6
Description
Summary:The chapter discusses the river’s central role for the residents of the small northern settlement in Sakha Yakutia (Northeastern Russia) and how living-by-the-river gives people more conscious thoughts on the distinctiveness of their “river place”. The Amma River has an iconic image as the region’s cleanest and most beautiful river, by which people proudly situate themselves. However, highly aestheticized narratives of the river through which this place is actively sensed do not entirely concur with the practical ways residents experience “fluid” qualities of the riverine environment. Local waterscape also demonstrates its “troubled” properties, which villagers are painfully aware of. By some standards, the community is deprived of resources because the riverine environment seems to provide little material value regarding the main economic activity – animal husbandry – and is exposed to increased flooding. This chapter analyzes how a place may anchor human lives despite the tension between “means”: “insufficient” physical settings of waterscape scenery and its rendered meanings. The chapter examines the complexity of how a place is sensed and makes sense through various forces, forms of agency, and encounters between people and the river.