Cultural ‘improvement’, discipline and mining in early modern Sápmi

This paper explores overlapping of economy and politics with ideology in 17th-century northern Sweden. Focusing on silver mining conducted in Sápmi (Lapland), the paper investigates the rhetoric of mines as arenas of moral and cultural improvement, the ways this rhetoric was expressed and aided by m...

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Bibliographic Details
Published in:Post-Medieval Archaeology
Main Author: Naum, Magdalena Ewa
Format: Article in Journal/Newspaper
Language:English
Published: 2018
Subjects:
Online Access:https://pure.au.dk/portal/da/publications/cultural-improvement-discipline-and-mining-in-early-modern-spmi(2296299e-7478-455c-b5e1-49e28ff6833f).html
https://doi.org/10.1080/00794236.2018.1461328
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Summary:This paper explores overlapping of economy and politics with ideology in 17th-century northern Sweden. Focusing on silver mining conducted in Sápmi (Lapland), the paper investigates the rhetoric of mines as arenas of moral and cultural improvement, the ways this rhetoric was expressed and aided by material culture and the ways the civilizing projects were contested by the indigenous Sami, towards whom many of these policies were directed. The analysis is set in a wider context of the 17th-century concept of political economy, state policies aiming at a better incorporation of Sápmi into the mainstream economy and culture of Sweden and informed by Foucauldian perspectives on governmentality and its spatial dimensions.