Is Skrei a Historical Norwegian Figure? The Nomadic Symbiosis of Fish and Humans in the Lofoten Islands

This paper draws from short ethnographic fieldwork and collected oral histories in the Lofoten Islands in Northern Norway in 2019. In this paper I follow “skrei”, the Norwegian codfish (Gadus morhua). I explore what I call the “nomadic symbiosis” of islanders and skrei via their diachronic entanglem...

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Main Author: Nafsika Papacharalampous
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: LED Edizioni Universitarie 2021-06-01
Series:Relations
Subjects:
Online Access:https://www.ledonline.it/index.php/Relations/article/view/2468
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spelling doaj-7f8a2749cae74c448152145029a236c12021-06-08T06:55:30ZengLED Edizioni Universitarie Relations 2283-31962280-96432021-06-0181-29711410.7358/rela-2020-0102-papa1414Is Skrei a Historical Norwegian Figure? The Nomadic Symbiosis of Fish and Humans in the Lofoten IslandsNafsika PapacharalampousThis paper draws from short ethnographic fieldwork and collected oral histories in the Lofoten Islands in Northern Norway in 2019. In this paper I follow “skrei”, the Norwegian codfish (Gadus morhua). I explore what I call the “nomadic symbiosis” of islanders and skrei via their diachronic entanglements, as these appear in historical and present narratives, in changing ideas around economic development and progress, but also in the changes in the physical and political landscapes. These moments of connection, all challenge human-centric views arguing for skrei’s agency in cuisine-making, but also vis-à-vis identity-making, as skrei became recognized conjuring a newfound sense of belonging and becoming part of an imagined community within the Lofoten islands and beyond. I argue that these meaningful interactions create worlds that decenter human agency and revisit the notion of cuisine and nation-building processes as truly multispecies entanglements.https://www.ledonline.it/index.php/Relations/article/view/2468fishfishinghuman-animal relationsidentitymulti-species ethnographynationalismnomadic symbiosisnon-human agencynorwayoral histories.
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Nafsika Papacharalampous
spellingShingle Nafsika Papacharalampous
Is Skrei a Historical Norwegian Figure? The Nomadic Symbiosis of Fish and Humans in the Lofoten Islands
Relations
fish
fishing
human-animal relations
identity
multi-species ethnography
nationalism
nomadic symbiosis
non-human agency
norway
oral histories.
author_facet Nafsika Papacharalampous
author_sort Nafsika Papacharalampous
title Is Skrei a Historical Norwegian Figure? The Nomadic Symbiosis of Fish and Humans in the Lofoten Islands
title_short Is Skrei a Historical Norwegian Figure? The Nomadic Symbiosis of Fish and Humans in the Lofoten Islands
title_full Is Skrei a Historical Norwegian Figure? The Nomadic Symbiosis of Fish and Humans in the Lofoten Islands
title_fullStr Is Skrei a Historical Norwegian Figure? The Nomadic Symbiosis of Fish and Humans in the Lofoten Islands
title_full_unstemmed Is Skrei a Historical Norwegian Figure? The Nomadic Symbiosis of Fish and Humans in the Lofoten Islands
title_sort is skrei a historical norwegian figure? the nomadic symbiosis of fish and humans in the lofoten islands
publisher LED Edizioni Universitarie
series Relations
issn 2283-3196
2280-9643
publishDate 2021-06-01
description This paper draws from short ethnographic fieldwork and collected oral histories in the Lofoten Islands in Northern Norway in 2019. In this paper I follow “skrei”, the Norwegian codfish (Gadus morhua). I explore what I call the “nomadic symbiosis” of islanders and skrei via their diachronic entanglements, as these appear in historical and present narratives, in changing ideas around economic development and progress, but also in the changes in the physical and political landscapes. These moments of connection, all challenge human-centric views arguing for skrei’s agency in cuisine-making, but also vis-à-vis identity-making, as skrei became recognized conjuring a newfound sense of belonging and becoming part of an imagined community within the Lofoten islands and beyond. I argue that these meaningful interactions create worlds that decenter human agency and revisit the notion of cuisine and nation-building processes as truly multispecies entanglements.
topic fish
fishing
human-animal relations
identity
multi-species ethnography
nationalism
nomadic symbiosis
non-human agency
norway
oral histories.
url https://www.ledonline.it/index.php/Relations/article/view/2468
work_keys_str_mv AT nafsikapapacharalampous isskreiahistoricalnorwegianfigurethenomadicsymbiosisoffishandhumansinthelofotenislands
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