Indigenous Life Stories as Narratives of Health and Resistance: A dialogical narrative analysis

Published version available in CJNR (Canadian Journal of Nursing Research) 2012, 44(2) :64-85(22). The Sami people have historically been exposed to severe assimilation processes. The objective of this study was to explore elderly Samis' experiences of health. A total of 19 elderly Sami individ...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Blix, Bodil Hansen, Hamran, Torunn, Normann, Hans Ketil
Format: Article in Journal/Newspaper
Language:English
Published: McGill School of Nursing 2012
Subjects:
Online Access:https://hdl.handle.net/10037/12477
Description
Summary:Published version available in CJNR (Canadian Journal of Nursing Research) 2012, 44(2) :64-85(22). The Sami people have historically been exposed to severe assimilation processes. The objective of this study was to explore elderly Samis' experiences of health. A total of 19 elderly Sami individuals in Norway were interviewed. This article is a dialogical narrative analysis of the life stories of 3 Sami women. The life stories are perceived as narratives of health and resistance. Postcolonial theory provides a framework for understanding the impact of historical and socioeconomic factors in people's lives and health. Narratives of resistance demonstrate that people are not passive victims of the legacy of colonialism. Resistance is not a passive state but an active process, as is health. Resistance is a resource that should be appreciated by health services, both at a systemic level — for example, through partnership with Indigenous elderly in the planning and shaping of services — and in individual encounters between patients and healthcare providers.