- Research Article
1
- 10.3368/aa.60.1.86
- May 1, 2025
- Arctic Anthropology
- Mette Simonsen Abildgaard
<h3>Abstract</h3> In this article, I ask what it means for Greenland’s telecommunication infrastructure to be the result of a rapid modernization process. Drawing on concepts from science and technology studies and the temporal turn in anthropology, I highlight the production of “infrastructural time” (Appel 2018) to underscore the relationship between spatial and temporal dimensions when Greenland’s infrastructure is imagined, built and practiced in a (post)colonial context. Through archival research, ethnographic interviews, and fieldwork, I show how the construction of a comprehensive telecommunication infrastructure in Greenland after World War II produced competing temporalities characterized by haste and pause, which linger on and intersect with Greenland’s existing infrastructures. When examining these temporalities in Greenland’s modernization process, it seems that coloniality is not allied with a particular tempo but that both haste and pause can be part of the colonial project to keep the center in control.
- Research Article
- 10.3368/aa.60.1.1
- May 1, 2025
- Arctic Anthropology
- Gerad M Smith + 3 more
<h3>Abstract</h3> This paper discusses the critical era of cultural contact between the Dene population and Euro‐Americans during the 18th and 19th centuries at Shaw Creek in the Middle Tanana Valley, Alaska. It also provides a regional social context for the most recent archaeological component at the Swan Point Archaeological Site. The Tanana Valley represents one of the last major subarctic regions of North America to be incorporated into colonial governance, and this paper summarizes those events and their impact on the local Alaska Native population and their traditional place names.
- Research Article
- 10.3368/aa.60.1.51
- May 1, 2025
- Arctic Anthropology
- Yoko Kugo + 1 more
<h3>Abstract</h3> This article is an ethnographic field report on the study of uses of underground food storage facilities (“meat caches”) relating to sociocultural and climatic changes in arctic and sub‐arctic communities in western Alaska. In the summers of 2022 and 2023, the authors (a Japanese female anthropologist and an American male anthropologist) conducted fieldwork in the partner communities, recognizing that our roles in participant observation were somewhat different because of our differing identities. This paper introduces how our ethnic backgrounds and genders have affected our experiences of participant observation and how ethnographers can learn about community and family food traditions from community perspectives based on diverse identities (gender, age, language) in relation to those of research partners.
- Research Article
- 10.3368/aa.60.1.101
- May 1, 2025
- Arctic Anthropology
- Arvid Viken + 3 more
<h3>Abstract</h3> This article addresses tourism in the Sámi areas of Norway and how 23 Sámi and non‐Sámi tourism providers deal with issues of cultural sensitivity. The article is based on a study that asked how sensitive issues had occurred in Sámi tourism operations and how they had dealt with them. Both Sámi and non‐Sámi tourism experience providers met a series of dilemmas. During interviews and conversations, terms such as recognition and respect appeared, which are also central to theoretical discussions on cultural sensitivity in the field. The article has a particular focus on how tourism providers deal with ethnocentrism and stereotyping and how these aspects are touched upon in production and discourses related to traditional costumes, handicrafts, and souvenir trade. Further, as reindeer are central in Sámi tourism, human‐animal relations are discussed as a sensitive aspect of Sámi tourism. Additional issues are discussed, such as tourism development and the split between different Sámi groups, the tension between cultural policing and innovation, and challenges related to border management. In conclusion, the concept of cultural sensitivity is discussed in light of the aspects that emerged in conversation with the tourism providers, pointing at ways to widen the concept to include analysis of sensitive aspects of tourism provided by Sámi themselves.
- Research Article
- 10.3368/aa.60.1.31
- May 1, 2025
- Arctic Anthropology
- Oddmund Andersen
<h3>Abstract</h3> The article describes the coastal Sámi population with a focus on Hamarøy municipality, northern Norway. Based on written sources from the 15th to 16th centuries, an agricultural economy is described, including both grain cultivation and livestock farming. Through minor excavations of settlement mounds and pollen analyses, it is argued that this economy, as described in written sources, has roots back to the Middle Ages. Livestock farming was introduced in the early part of the Middle Ages, but hunting, trapping, and fishing remained important. From around AD 1350, it is likely that grain cultivation was established. In the second part of the article, it is discussed whether a change in the economy led to other changes in the culture. By analyzing cultural heritage sites in the same area from the Middle Ages to more recent times, the discussion revolves around whether the changes led to changes in ritual practices.
- Research Article
- 10.3368/aa.60.1.114
- May 1, 2025
- Arctic Anthropology
- Pekka Virtanen
<h3>Abstract</h3> Trapping of ptarmigan by snare in winter is an ancient tradition in Fennoscandia, and in the 19th century, ptarmigan had become an important source of income. Changes in external factors after the 1950s have, however, altered the socioeconomic context, leading to a radical decrease in the number of professional trappers. Based on field data from two periods 60 years apart, this article provides a diachronic analysis of the change in ptarmigan trapping and the main factors behind its decline as a meaningful economic activity. The results show that whereas the practice of setting snares still relies on traditional knowledge, external developments, such as a transition to motorized transport and market failures, were—along with broader socioeconomic and demographic changes—the key factors behind the decline. Changes in the harvest base due to climate change or other causes mentioned in the interviews appear to have been less important factors.
- Research Article
- 10.3368/aa.60.1.63
- May 1, 2025
- Arctic Anthropology
- Susanna Gartler
<h3>Abstract</h3> Mining has historically driven the colonial transformations of the Yukon. This paper introduces the concept of a resource imaginary, referring to the predominant perception of the Yukon in terms of mineral resource extraction. This perception deeply influences land use, labor dynamics, and the sociocultural fabric of Yukon society. The persistence of this resource imaginary presents ongoing challenges for First Nation cosmologies. Narratives are instrumental in shaping these imaginaries. Through narrative reinhabitation—which incorporates linguistic, legislative, and temporal dimensions—Yukon First Nations seek to challenge the resource imaginary, promote Indigenous cosmologies, and encourage a harmonious coexistence of multiple “worlds.” Based on extensive, multi‐year research with mining and First Nations stakeholders, this paper explores the interplay between the extractive industry and narrative reinhabitation, with a specific focus on the First Nation of Nacho Nyäk Dun. It addresses an underexplored intersection by examining the Yukon’s evolving recognition as home once again while demonstrating that central Yukon First Nations neither uniformly support nor oppose resource extraction; rather, they situate themselves within a framework of place‐based histories that integrate both Indigenous and mining legacies.
- Research Article
1
- 10.3368/aa.59.2.193
- Jul 1, 2024
- Arctic Anthropology
- Heidi Konttinen
<h3>Abstract</h3> Seal hunting has been practiced on the coast of Finland since the Stone Age. Locally, it is conceived of as a tradition, yet beyond the local context, it is frequently framed in other—often reductionist—terms such as sustainable marine resource management or economic activity. In this article, I study how the Finnish seal-hunting tradition practiced on the Bothnian Bay unfolds locally and how it is perceived, portrayed, and shaped by national, European, international, and global actors. The relational understanding of the tradition presented here is based on the experiences and knowledge of one fur seamstress and eight seal hunters from the region. The data consist of semistructured interviews and review workshops that are analyzed using situational analysis. The results suggest that the practice of the seal-hunting tradition on the Bothnian Bay engages with place-based onto-epistemology, which is—often unwittingly—influenced by regulating acts.
- Research Article
- 10.3368/aa.59.2.179
- Jul 1, 2024
- Arctic Anthropology
- Karolina Sikora
<h3>Abstract</h3> International law has recognized the human right to cultural heritage, although its grassroots effectiveness may be hard to achieve. This difficulty is because implementation tools often are not tailored to meet local political and sociocultural conditions. Based on repeated fieldwork research among Izhma Komi of northern Russia, this article delves into the reality of the human right to cultural heritage by analyzing <i>who</i> decides on <i>what</i> is to be protected, <i>why</i>, and for <i>whom</i>. Even though the Russian administration has become increasingly centralized, there is still space for informal arrangements between the people and officials, challenging the state’s overpowering presence in cultural matters. In this regard, the research reveals that Izhma Komi’s cultural heritage is largely driven by the people and cultural intelligentsia, owing to the tacit social contract. Ultimately, the article proposes an alternative implementation of the human right to cultural heritage through culturally sensitive local arrangements.
- Research Article
1
- 10.3368/aa.59.2.131
- Jul 1, 2024
- Arctic Anthropology
- Erin Mooneyham + 2 more
<h3>Abstract</h3> This article presents the first published faunal analysis of an inland archaeological site in the Kodiak archipelago. <i>Nanwam Caniani Nunasinalleq</i> (Big Old Village by the Lake, KAR‐310) is an archaeological site on Kodiak Island’s Karluk Lake. Archaeological faunal remains from this site were analyzed to understand how Alutiiq/Sugpiaq ancestors used the inland environment and its resources. Zooarchaeological identifications revealed local fish, terrestrial mammals, and birds, as well as small numbers of marine fish, mammals, and shells. Together with the site survey data and ethnographic evidence, we suggest that this site was part of an inland village used over multiple seasons. This scenario is a departure from earlier interpretations of settlement patterns and the seasonal round of the Kodiak Archipelago and the Gulf of Alaska, in general, but consistent with more recent survey data.