| Title | Chapter 6. Cultural Nature in Mid-Lappish Reindeer Herding Communities |
|---|---|
| Contributor | Maria Lähteenmäki(author) |
| Oona Ilmolahti(author) | |
| Outi Manninen(author) | |
| Sari Stark(author) | |
| DOI | https://doi.org/10.3197/63824846758018.ch06 |
| Landing page | https://www.jstor.org/stable/jj.7193881.10 |
| License | https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/2.0/ |
| Copyright | The White Horse Press |
| Publisher | The White Horse Press |
| Published on | 2023-10-01 |
| Short abstract | Our research task is to present and analyse features of the local human–nature and human–reindeer relations in the historical timespan of the twentieth century and in the context of cultural nature in the historical Forest Sami area of Finnish Mid-Lapland. |
| Long abstract | Our research task is to present and analyse features of the local human-nature and human-reindeer relations in the historical timespan of the twentieth century and in the context of cultural nature in the historical Forest Sami area of Finnish Mid-Lapland. By cultural nature we refer to the different meanings and attributes groups and individuals give and have given to their surrounding natural environment with its fauna, flora, and waterways. The question is viewed through environmental changes and the meanings connected to reindeer roundups (corrals) and roundup places as an example of human-nature interaction. The reindeer roundups have historically been important social meeting places for subarctic communities, and the roundup events have traditionally been the highlight of the reindeer year. Our empirical focus lies in two reindeer herding cooperatives (Finn. paliskunta), Sattasniemi and Oraniemi, geographically located in the middle of Finnish Lapland ‒ mainly in Sodankylä, and partly in Savukoski and Pelkosenniemi municipalities ‒ and the reindeer roundup processes in these cooperatives. Our key source data consists of archival material, such as the minutes and reports of the Reindeer Herders Association and Sattasniemi co-operative. We have also utilised regional, local and occupational newspapers and magazines from the 1920s to the 2010s. In order to reach the voices of the contemporary herder communities we conducted a Cultural Nature Survey from 22 February to 30 March 2021. In the course of the twentieth century, Mid-Lapland faced enormous environmental changes. Intensive forestry, energy production and the mining industry have physically altered the landscape and disturbed reindeer herding based on natural pasture rotation. Continuity of livelihood and way of life are worrying issues in the region. The feeling of not being heard or understood also affects communities’ nature and reindeer relationships. The more the surrounding natural and cultural environments have changed, the more the Mid-Lappish communities have tried to revitalise the ‘original’ nature-human-reindeer relationship and the nostalgic stories of dense forests, free waterways and untouched wilderness. The locals emphasise their ‘authentic’ Lappish lifestyle, at least in terms of reindeer herding. This endeavour can be regarded as cultural use of nature. The article was prepared in cooperation between the University of Lapland and the University of Eastern Finland. It is part of the HISTECO project (2019‒2023) funded by the Academy of Finland and led by Sari Stark. |
| Page range | pp. 99–133 |
| Print length | 35 pages |
| Language | English (Original) |
| Media | 7 illustrations |
| 1 table |
| Landing Page | Full text URL | Platform | |||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| https://www.jstor.org/stable/jj.7193881.10 | Landing page | https://www.jstor.org/stable/pdf/jj.7193881.10.pdf | Full text URL | JSTOR |
Maria Lähteenmäki is Professor in History at the University of Eastern Finland and Adjunct Professor at the University of Helsinki. She specialises in the history of sub-arctic border regions and communities such as Lapland, the Barents region and Karelia. She has published works such as The Peoples in Lapland. Borders and Interaction in the North Calotte 1808–1889 (2006) and Footprints in the Snow: A Long History of the Arctic Finland (2017). She co-edited Lake Ladoga. The Coastal History of the Greatest Lake in Europe (2023) and co-edited The Barents Region. A Transnational History of Subarctic Northern Europe (2015). Her latest work is Punapakolaiset, which chronicles Finnish red refugees in Soviet Karelia in 1918‒1938.
Oona Ilmolahti has a Ph.D. in history, and she is a project researcher at the University of Eastern Finland. Her interests lie in the history of emotions and senses, post-war societies, transgenerational trauma, museology and culture nature interaction. In recent years she has studied border regions, in particular Karelian identities, as well as biographies. Her latest article concerns the multisensory history of Lake Ladoga (2022).
Outi Manninen is a Doctor of Natural Sciences and Senior researcher. She is a plant ecologist, currently working as a researcher at the University of Lapland and Natural Resources Institute Finland. She is a member of the project ‘Historical sites as a novel tool for predicting long-term boreal and subarctic ecosystem change’ (HISTECO). Her latest co-authored article concerns historical reindeer corrals as portraits of human-nature relationships in Northern Finland (2022).
Sari Stark is Docent in Plant Ecology and university researcher in the University of Lapland. Her research focus is the effects of global changes on northern ecosystems. She is the PI of the project ‘Historical sites as a novel tool for predicting long-term boreal and subarctic ecosystem change’ (HISTECO), financed by Academy of Finland 2019‒2023. Her latest co-authored article is ‘The ecosystem effects of reindeer (Rangifer tarandus) in northern Fennoscandia: Past, present and future’, Perspectives in Plant Ecology, Evolution and Systematics 58 (2023).