German and Austrian occupant literature on the Sami in Norway and Lapland – “Harmless” minority, a resource, and well-off “reindeer kings”

In previous research on the history of the Second World War in Finland and Norway, relations between the German and Austrian occupying forces and the Sami people have generally been considered to be good. The occupant gaze upon the Sami has been interpreted as exoticizing and “touristic”. Histori...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Nyyssönen, Jukka
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Registered Association of Hela Researchers 2020-07-01
Series:J@rgonia
Subjects:
Online Access:http://urn.fi/URN:NBN:fi:jyu-202006234344
id doaj-cb144a0d69604e0bbf3e9223459981b7
record_format Article
spelling doaj-cb144a0d69604e0bbf3e9223459981b72021-09-30T17:39:37ZengRegistered Association of Hela ResearchersJ@rgonia1459-305X2020-07-0118355274German and Austrian occupant literature on the Sami in Norway and Lapland – “Harmless” minority, a resource, and well-off “reindeer kings”Nyyssönen, Jukka0Department of Archaeology, History, Religious Studies and Theology, UiT – The Arctic University of NorwayIn previous research on the history of the Second World War in Finland and Norway, relations between the German and Austrian occupying forces and the Sami people have generally been considered to be good. The occupant gaze upon the Sami has been interpreted as exoticizing and “touristic”. Historical encounters and the Sami position in the literary discourse are discussed and explained in this article, using a selection of German and Austrian wartime and post-war literature. The discursive reading the sources bear evidence of multiple ways of relating to the Sami, from benign to racializing; from demeaning to one filled with surprise at unveiling a well-off, yet “primitive” minority. The Sami were positioned in a complex way in the Nazi racial hierarchies, which were multiple, some aspects of which appeared to enable the occupants to posit a benign gaze upon the minority. The authors echoed Nordic research on the Sami, and the hierarchies produced there as well. The weight that race had on perceptions of the Sami is discussed, whilst other socio-economic factors are analysed as well. http://urn.fi/URN:NBN:fi:jyu-202006234344the samisecond world warfinlandlaplandnorwayminoritiesgerman and austrian literature
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Nyyssönen, Jukka
spellingShingle Nyyssönen, Jukka
German and Austrian occupant literature on the Sami in Norway and Lapland – “Harmless” minority, a resource, and well-off “reindeer kings”
J@rgonia
the sami
second world war
finland
lapland
norway
minorities
german and austrian literature
author_facet Nyyssönen, Jukka
author_sort Nyyssönen, Jukka
title German and Austrian occupant literature on the Sami in Norway and Lapland – “Harmless” minority, a resource, and well-off “reindeer kings”
title_short German and Austrian occupant literature on the Sami in Norway and Lapland – “Harmless” minority, a resource, and well-off “reindeer kings”
title_full German and Austrian occupant literature on the Sami in Norway and Lapland – “Harmless” minority, a resource, and well-off “reindeer kings”
title_fullStr German and Austrian occupant literature on the Sami in Norway and Lapland – “Harmless” minority, a resource, and well-off “reindeer kings”
title_full_unstemmed German and Austrian occupant literature on the Sami in Norway and Lapland – “Harmless” minority, a resource, and well-off “reindeer kings”
title_sort german and austrian occupant literature on the sami in norway and lapland – “harmless” minority, a resource, and well-off “reindeer kings”
publisher Registered Association of Hela Researchers
series J@rgonia
issn 1459-305X
publishDate 2020-07-01
description In previous research on the history of the Second World War in Finland and Norway, relations between the German and Austrian occupying forces and the Sami people have generally been considered to be good. The occupant gaze upon the Sami has been interpreted as exoticizing and “touristic”. Historical encounters and the Sami position in the literary discourse are discussed and explained in this article, using a selection of German and Austrian wartime and post-war literature. The discursive reading the sources bear evidence of multiple ways of relating to the Sami, from benign to racializing; from demeaning to one filled with surprise at unveiling a well-off, yet “primitive” minority. The Sami were positioned in a complex way in the Nazi racial hierarchies, which were multiple, some aspects of which appeared to enable the occupants to posit a benign gaze upon the minority. The authors echoed Nordic research on the Sami, and the hierarchies produced there as well. The weight that race had on perceptions of the Sami is discussed, whilst other socio-economic factors are analysed as well.
topic the sami
second world war
finland
lapland
norway
minorities
german and austrian literature
url http://urn.fi/URN:NBN:fi:jyu-202006234344
work_keys_str_mv AT nyyssonenjukka germanandaustrianoccupantliteratureonthesamiinnorwayandlaplandharmlessminorityaresourceandwelloffreindeerkings
_version_ 1716862886135988224