Being Sami: an ethnography of identity through the lens of the Riddu Riđđu festival
Abstract
Since the 1960s Sami people have been actively seeking
recognition of their Indigenous status. The notion of Sami people
as Indigenous has developed along with the rise of indigeneity
since the Second World War. The push for recognition received a
major boost in the late 1970s – early 1980s during the conflict
over the proposed Áltá dam. Building the dam would have led to
the flooding of the Sami majority village of Máze and disrupted
reindeer herding and salmon fishing. The activity against the dam
and the attention it gained marked the beginning of traction in
political arenas that has since influenced Sami people’s access
to rights and recognition as Indigenous.
An increasingly articulated part of the process of recognition is
the negotiation and transformation of Sami identity including
that of Coastal Sami people. Control over Sami identification has
gone from being primarily the domain of non-Sami colonisers to
that of Sami people themselves. The conditions surrounding
presentations, articulations and transformations of Sami identity
are explored. This exploration includes an examination of the
traits people need to have to present themselves as Sami and have
their identities recognised by others, as well as how these
traits are expressed in order to gain recognition and rights.
Inspired by Brubaker and Cooper (2000), identity is adopted as a
category of analysis. This means clearly presenting processes,
practices and relationships in terms of their implications for
identity. The ethnographic lens through which these issues are
examined is principally the Riddu Riđđu festival, an
international Indigenous peoples’ festival held in Norway run
primarily by Sami people.
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