As long as we continue to joik, we'll remember who we are: negotiating identity and the performance of culture: the Saami joik

Thesis (Ph. D.)--University of Washington, 1993 The focus of this dissertation is the indigenous musical genre of the Saami (formerly Lapps) of northern Scandinavia (Norway, Sweden, and Finland). Known throughout the region generically as joik, this is vocal music traditionally performed by a single...

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Main Author: Jones-Bamman, Richard Wiren, 1951-
Format: Thesis
Language:English
Published: 1993
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/1773/11250
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spelling ftunivwashington:oai:digital.lib.washington.edu:1773/11250 2024-06-02T08:13:53+00:00 As long as we continue to joik, we'll remember who we are: negotiating identity and the performance of culture: the Saami joik Jones-Bamman, Richard Wiren, 1951- 1993 viii, 438 p. http://hdl.handle.net/1773/11250 en_US eng b29608776 30599021 Thesis 41930 http://hdl.handle.net/1773/11250 Copyright is held by the individual authors. Theses--Music Thesis 1993 ftunivwashington 2024-05-06T11:39:40Z Thesis (Ph. D.)--University of Washington, 1993 The focus of this dissertation is the indigenous musical genre of the Saami (formerly Lapps) of northern Scandinavia (Norway, Sweden, and Finland). Known throughout the region generically as joik, this is vocal music traditionally performed by a single individual without accompaniment. Even though joiking has always played an integral role in Saami culture, until very recently the genre was rarely heard in public contexts. While some of this can be explained in emic conceptions about performance, this development has primarily been the result of the negative reactions joiking has engendered among the neighboring Scandinavian populations who constitute a clear ethnic and cultural majority.In the late 1960s, however, joik did re-emerge significantly from its secretive state, but most often in performances which no longer fit the 'traditional' parameters. In the course of once again publicly celebrating this vital cultural expression, many Saami musicians combined joik with a remarkable variety of instrumental ensembles, producing what became known as 'modern' joik. The popularity of these efforts not only demonstrated the viability of this particular approach to the genre, but eventually contributed to the revitalization of joik in many of its traditional contexts.My primary concern in this work is to examine these developments from several different perspectives. First, I am concerned that such changes in performance not simply be regarded as the result of outside musical influences, but be seen as indicative of an ongoing pattern within Saami culture to negotiate a more positive ethnic identity, one which not only articulates intracultural diversity, but which also encourages the creation of a more unified Saami image then has previously existed. Second, I have posited that joik is ideally positioned to function as a rallying symbol for this movement, due to its primordial role in Saami culture as a means of incorporating individuals and the environment into a ... Thesis saami University of Washington, Seattle: ResearchWorks Norway
institution Open Polar
collection University of Washington, Seattle: ResearchWorks
op_collection_id ftunivwashington
language English
topic Theses--Music
spellingShingle Theses--Music
Jones-Bamman, Richard Wiren, 1951-
As long as we continue to joik, we'll remember who we are: negotiating identity and the performance of culture: the Saami joik
topic_facet Theses--Music
description Thesis (Ph. D.)--University of Washington, 1993 The focus of this dissertation is the indigenous musical genre of the Saami (formerly Lapps) of northern Scandinavia (Norway, Sweden, and Finland). Known throughout the region generically as joik, this is vocal music traditionally performed by a single individual without accompaniment. Even though joiking has always played an integral role in Saami culture, until very recently the genre was rarely heard in public contexts. While some of this can be explained in emic conceptions about performance, this development has primarily been the result of the negative reactions joiking has engendered among the neighboring Scandinavian populations who constitute a clear ethnic and cultural majority.In the late 1960s, however, joik did re-emerge significantly from its secretive state, but most often in performances which no longer fit the 'traditional' parameters. In the course of once again publicly celebrating this vital cultural expression, many Saami musicians combined joik with a remarkable variety of instrumental ensembles, producing what became known as 'modern' joik. The popularity of these efforts not only demonstrated the viability of this particular approach to the genre, but eventually contributed to the revitalization of joik in many of its traditional contexts.My primary concern in this work is to examine these developments from several different perspectives. First, I am concerned that such changes in performance not simply be regarded as the result of outside musical influences, but be seen as indicative of an ongoing pattern within Saami culture to negotiate a more positive ethnic identity, one which not only articulates intracultural diversity, but which also encourages the creation of a more unified Saami image then has previously existed. Second, I have posited that joik is ideally positioned to function as a rallying symbol for this movement, due to its primordial role in Saami culture as a means of incorporating individuals and the environment into a ...
format Thesis
author Jones-Bamman, Richard Wiren, 1951-
author_facet Jones-Bamman, Richard Wiren, 1951-
author_sort Jones-Bamman, Richard Wiren, 1951-
title As long as we continue to joik, we'll remember who we are: negotiating identity and the performance of culture: the Saami joik
title_short As long as we continue to joik, we'll remember who we are: negotiating identity and the performance of culture: the Saami joik
title_full As long as we continue to joik, we'll remember who we are: negotiating identity and the performance of culture: the Saami joik
title_fullStr As long as we continue to joik, we'll remember who we are: negotiating identity and the performance of culture: the Saami joik
title_full_unstemmed As long as we continue to joik, we'll remember who we are: negotiating identity and the performance of culture: the Saami joik
title_sort as long as we continue to joik, we'll remember who we are: negotiating identity and the performance of culture: the saami joik
publishDate 1993
url http://hdl.handle.net/1773/11250
geographic Norway
geographic_facet Norway
genre saami
genre_facet saami
op_relation b29608776
30599021
Thesis 41930
http://hdl.handle.net/1773/11250
op_rights Copyright is held by the individual authors.
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