Forurenet Spisekammer - Havforureningens påvirkning på grindadráp

This paper examines how the Faroese and their pilot whaling practice, called grindadráp, is affected by global marine pollution. By analyzing how the Faroese have reacted to the fact that the pilot whale meat and blubber is polluted, and comparing these reactions with a similar case from Norway, it...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Tiselius, Mette
Format: Other/Unknown Material
Language:Danish
Published: Lunds universitet/Humanekologi 2019
Subjects:
Online Access:http://lup.lub.lu.se/student-papers/record/8966106
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spelling ftulundlupsp:oai:lup-student-papers.lub.lu.se:8966106 2023-07-30T04:03:25+02:00 Forurenet Spisekammer - Havforureningens påvirkning på grindadráp Tiselius, Mette 2019 application/pdf http://lup.lub.lu.se/student-papers/record/8966106 dan dan Lunds universitet/Humanekologi http://lup.lub.lu.se/student-papers/record/8966106 Human ecology global marine pollution grindadráp the Faroe Islands passive whaling environmental sociology denial non-mobilization Social Sciences M2 2019 ftulundlupsp 2023-07-11T20:09:35Z This paper examines how the Faroese and their pilot whaling practice, called grindadráp, is affected by global marine pollution. By analyzing how the Faroese have reacted to the fact that the pilot whale meat and blubber is polluted, and comparing these reactions with a similar case from Norway, it becomes clear that global marine pollution has paralyzed the Faroese response to the issue. The Faroese feel sorrow, despair and fear when confronted with how grindadráp is threatened by global marine pollution. These feelings cause a process of nonmobilization, and partial denial of both the health risks and the actual reasons for global marine pollution. These reactions enable the grindadráp to continue, but it also enables the systems that cause global marine pollution to continue without objection. The Faroese face a dilemma between continuing the sustainable practice of grindadráp despite its health risks, or ceasing the practice of grindadráp at the price of Faroese culture and identity. Even though it is uncertain whether grindadráp belongs in the future or the past, the practice itself is sustainable in ways that could inspire future generations. Other/Unknown Material Faroe Islands Lund University Publications Student Papers (LUP-SP) Faroe Islands Norway
institution Open Polar
collection Lund University Publications Student Papers (LUP-SP)
op_collection_id ftulundlupsp
language Danish
topic Human ecology
global marine pollution
grindadráp
the Faroe Islands
passive whaling
environmental sociology
denial
non-mobilization
Social Sciences
spellingShingle Human ecology
global marine pollution
grindadráp
the Faroe Islands
passive whaling
environmental sociology
denial
non-mobilization
Social Sciences
Tiselius, Mette
Forurenet Spisekammer - Havforureningens påvirkning på grindadráp
topic_facet Human ecology
global marine pollution
grindadráp
the Faroe Islands
passive whaling
environmental sociology
denial
non-mobilization
Social Sciences
description This paper examines how the Faroese and their pilot whaling practice, called grindadráp, is affected by global marine pollution. By analyzing how the Faroese have reacted to the fact that the pilot whale meat and blubber is polluted, and comparing these reactions with a similar case from Norway, it becomes clear that global marine pollution has paralyzed the Faroese response to the issue. The Faroese feel sorrow, despair and fear when confronted with how grindadráp is threatened by global marine pollution. These feelings cause a process of nonmobilization, and partial denial of both the health risks and the actual reasons for global marine pollution. These reactions enable the grindadráp to continue, but it also enables the systems that cause global marine pollution to continue without objection. The Faroese face a dilemma between continuing the sustainable practice of grindadráp despite its health risks, or ceasing the practice of grindadráp at the price of Faroese culture and identity. Even though it is uncertain whether grindadráp belongs in the future or the past, the practice itself is sustainable in ways that could inspire future generations.
format Other/Unknown Material
author Tiselius, Mette
author_facet Tiselius, Mette
author_sort Tiselius, Mette
title Forurenet Spisekammer - Havforureningens påvirkning på grindadráp
title_short Forurenet Spisekammer - Havforureningens påvirkning på grindadráp
title_full Forurenet Spisekammer - Havforureningens påvirkning på grindadráp
title_fullStr Forurenet Spisekammer - Havforureningens påvirkning på grindadráp
title_full_unstemmed Forurenet Spisekammer - Havforureningens påvirkning på grindadráp
title_sort forurenet spisekammer - havforureningens påvirkning på grindadráp
publisher Lunds universitet/Humanekologi
publishDate 2019
url http://lup.lub.lu.se/student-papers/record/8966106
geographic Faroe Islands
Norway
geographic_facet Faroe Islands
Norway
genre Faroe Islands
genre_facet Faroe Islands
op_relation http://lup.lub.lu.se/student-papers/record/8966106
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