Bad Santa:cultural heritage, mystification of the Arctic, and tourism as an extractive industry

Abstract This article assesses the construction of cultural geographies of the European far North through an exploration of how Arctic motifs and imaginaries are used in the Christmas tourism industry in Finnish Lapland, and particularly in the city of Rovaniemi, which advertises itself as the ‘Offi...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Herva, V.-P. (Vesa-Pekka), Varnajot, A. (Alix), Pashkevich, A. (Albina)
Format: Article in Journal/Newspaper
Language:English
Published: Informa 2020
Subjects:
Online Access:http://urn.fi/urn:nbn:fi-fe2020091069221
Description
Summary:Abstract This article assesses the construction of cultural geographies of the European far North through an exploration of how Arctic motifs and imaginaries are used in the Christmas tourism industry in Finnish Lapland, and particularly in the city of Rovaniemi, which advertises itself as the ‘Official Hometown of Santa Claus’. Specifically, we draw parallels between Christmas tourism and Arctic mining by examining the similarities and interconnections between them. This highlights how these industries are related to the Arctic landscape they operate in and how both are ultimately embedded in similar cultural perceptions of and engagements with Lapland dating back centuries. A long-term perspective on Arctic geographical imaginaries enables a critical assessment of how the tourism and mining industries are both steeped in the exoticization and mythologising of the Arctic on the one hand and in a tradition of material and symbolic exploitation of northern resources on the other. This approach helps researchers to highlight a problematic character of the current development of Christmas tourism in Lapland.