Abstract

This paper discusses the role of libraries in the implementation of the Norwegianization policy towards the Sámi and Kven minorities in Norway. This question has not been written about or debated in the library history of Norway. The hypothesis is that the libraries had a dual function: they were both seen as an instrument of Norwegianization by the government, but were simultaneously places where modern ideas about democracy, equality and emancipation were made accessible to the minorities. Ironically, the schooling authorities’ efforts to learn the Sámi and Kven to read and write Norwegian, contributed to the rise of a reading and writing Sámi and Kven public from around 1890. Both groups had a high reading proficiency and in public-, school-, and private libraries the Sámi and Kven found a rich selection of books that argued for a more egalitarian society. There are methodological challenges in this research. Minority voices are often silenced in archives and libraries. Researchers have to carried out empirical studies and closely read archival documents in order to seek out alternative interpretations in documents that have been interpreted in a conventional way.

Highlights

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  • They reported on the effectiveness of the Norwegianization policy to the school- and church department. in 1887 school director Jens Killengreen made an inspection travel to all the school districts in Finnmark (Killengreen, 1887)

  • In all the municipalities where there is a public library, school director Killengreen makes a comment about its general status and notices the ethnic background of the users: Norwegians, Sámi or Kven

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Summary

Recommended Citation

Grenersen, Geir (2015) "The Role of the Libraries in the Norwegianization Policy 1880-1905," Proceedings from the Document Academy: Vol 2 : Iss. 1 , Article 11.

The Sámi and Kven in the Library History of Norway
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