Varieties of medical treatment and hierarchies of resort in Johan Turi’s Sámi deavsttat

Johan Turi's Sámi deavsttat/Lappish Texts (1918–1919) is examined as a source of information regarding early twentieth-century Sami healing methods and hierarchies of medical resort. Turi’s account of traditional and personal healing experiences in the Čohkkeras/Jukkasjärvi district reflects co...

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Main Author: DuBois, Thomas A.
Format: Article in Journal/Newspaper
Language:English
Published: University of Wisconsin-Madison, USA 2010
Subjects:
Online Access:http://urn.kb.se/resolve?urn=urn:nbn:se:umu:diva-39816
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spelling ftumeauniv:oai:DiVA.org:umu-39816 2023-10-09T21:53:01+02:00 Varieties of medical treatment and hierarchies of resort in Johan Turi’s Sámi deavsttat DuBois, Thomas A. 2010 application/pdf http://urn.kb.se/resolve?urn=urn:nbn:se:umu:diva-39816 eng eng University of Wisconsin-Madison, USA Umeå : Umeå University & The Royal Skyttean Society Journal of Northern Studies, 1654-5915, 2010, 1, s. 9-43 http://urn.kb.se/resolve?urn=urn:nbn:se:umu:diva-39816 info:eu-repo/semantics/openAccess Johan Turi Emilie Demant-Hatt Sami Shamanism folk healing hybridity Humanities Humaniora Article in journal info:eu-repo/semantics/article text 2010 ftumeauniv 2023-09-22T13:46:19Z Johan Turi's Sámi deavsttat/Lappish Texts (1918–1919) is examined as a source of information regarding early twentieth-century Sami healing methods and hierarchies of medical resort. Turi’s account of traditional and personal healing experiences in the Čohkkeras/Jukkasjärvi district reflects complex processes of intercultural exchange and hybridization, in which Sami families availed themselves of differing varieties of therapy depending on differing situations and personalities. Hierarchies of resort—that is, the order in which patients make use of competing healing resources—are illustrated by short histories (case studies) which Turi included in the final portion of his work. The text reveals a world in which local Sami noaidevuohtashamanic healing) lingered as a largely stigmatized clandestine resource, competing variously with shamanic healing offered by more distant (Norwegian) Sami, as well as healing drawn from Finnish magic, Swedish medicine, and Læstadian faith healing. Ill health, insanity, and decimation of one’s herd are depicted as attacks not only on an individual, but on the individual’s entire family, and their effects can be felt ultimately by members of the family’s subsequent generation(s). Non-Sami individuals play important roles both as threats and as sources of potential assistance in the struggle to maintain or regain health. Article in Journal/Newspaper Journal of Northern Studies Jukkasjärvi sami Umeå University: Publications (DiVA) Jukkasjärvi ENVELOPE(20.667,20.667,67.833,67.833)
institution Open Polar
collection Umeå University: Publications (DiVA)
op_collection_id ftumeauniv
language English
topic Johan Turi
Emilie Demant-Hatt
Sami
Shamanism
folk healing
hybridity
Humanities
Humaniora
spellingShingle Johan Turi
Emilie Demant-Hatt
Sami
Shamanism
folk healing
hybridity
Humanities
Humaniora
DuBois, Thomas A.
Varieties of medical treatment and hierarchies of resort in Johan Turi’s Sámi deavsttat
topic_facet Johan Turi
Emilie Demant-Hatt
Sami
Shamanism
folk healing
hybridity
Humanities
Humaniora
description Johan Turi's Sámi deavsttat/Lappish Texts (1918–1919) is examined as a source of information regarding early twentieth-century Sami healing methods and hierarchies of medical resort. Turi’s account of traditional and personal healing experiences in the Čohkkeras/Jukkasjärvi district reflects complex processes of intercultural exchange and hybridization, in which Sami families availed themselves of differing varieties of therapy depending on differing situations and personalities. Hierarchies of resort—that is, the order in which patients make use of competing healing resources—are illustrated by short histories (case studies) which Turi included in the final portion of his work. The text reveals a world in which local Sami noaidevuohtashamanic healing) lingered as a largely stigmatized clandestine resource, competing variously with shamanic healing offered by more distant (Norwegian) Sami, as well as healing drawn from Finnish magic, Swedish medicine, and Læstadian faith healing. Ill health, insanity, and decimation of one’s herd are depicted as attacks not only on an individual, but on the individual’s entire family, and their effects can be felt ultimately by members of the family’s subsequent generation(s). Non-Sami individuals play important roles both as threats and as sources of potential assistance in the struggle to maintain or regain health.
format Article in Journal/Newspaper
author DuBois, Thomas A.
author_facet DuBois, Thomas A.
author_sort DuBois, Thomas A.
title Varieties of medical treatment and hierarchies of resort in Johan Turi’s Sámi deavsttat
title_short Varieties of medical treatment and hierarchies of resort in Johan Turi’s Sámi deavsttat
title_full Varieties of medical treatment and hierarchies of resort in Johan Turi’s Sámi deavsttat
title_fullStr Varieties of medical treatment and hierarchies of resort in Johan Turi’s Sámi deavsttat
title_full_unstemmed Varieties of medical treatment and hierarchies of resort in Johan Turi’s Sámi deavsttat
title_sort varieties of medical treatment and hierarchies of resort in johan turi’s sámi deavsttat
publisher University of Wisconsin-Madison, USA
publishDate 2010
url http://urn.kb.se/resolve?urn=urn:nbn:se:umu:diva-39816
long_lat ENVELOPE(20.667,20.667,67.833,67.833)
geographic Jukkasjärvi
geographic_facet Jukkasjärvi
genre Journal of Northern Studies
Jukkasjärvi
sami
genre_facet Journal of Northern Studies
Jukkasjärvi
sami
op_relation Journal of Northern Studies, 1654-5915, 2010, 1, s. 9-43
http://urn.kb.se/resolve?urn=urn:nbn:se:umu:diva-39816
op_rights info:eu-repo/semantics/openAccess
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