LNUC Concurrences and SUN Project: Study Trip to Staare/Östersund
Sep
9
to Sep 11

LNUC Concurrences and SUN Project: Study Trip to Staare/Östersund

The study trip aims to learn about South Sapmi and to inspire discussion, debate, and intellectual exchange about Nordic colonialism, postcolonialism and decoloniality in the spirit of synergy within the group and with those whom we meet with and listen to in Staare/Östersund.

The field study will include exchange with colleagues at Gaske/Mid University and the Båskoe Network who are working on making visible the Sami presence in the region both historically and in the present. Additionally to be discussed are research questions designed to increase knowledge about the South Sami language and culture to bolster their representation in social, economic, political, and academic narratives.

Jämtland is a South Sami administrative region and Staare/Östersund is a South Sami administrative municipality. LNUC/SUN will meet with representatives working with Sami issues in health- and medical care, social welfare as well as environmental and technical domains. We will also engage with representatives (Jerker Bexelius) for Gaaltije to learn more about how the Sami community works with cultural, practical, and political issues in the region.

Additionally planned are excursions to Svartsjöarna and a visit at Frösö church to understand the environment and conditions for the Sami community and reindeer herding.

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WCEH 2024 Panel -- Indigenous Survivance: Rethinking Environmental Crisis and Global Colonialism
Aug
19
to Aug 23

WCEH 2024 Panel -- Indigenous Survivance: Rethinking Environmental Crisis and Global Colonialism

The SUN Project’s first conference panel will be taking place at the fourth World Congress of Environmental History! Located at the University of Oulu in picturesque Oulu, Finland, our panel is entitled, “Indigenous Survivance: Rethinking Environmental Crisis and Global Colonialism.”

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NAISA 2024: Native American and Indigenous Studies Association at Bådåddjo, Norway
Jun
6
to Jun 8

NAISA 2024: Native American and Indigenous Studies Association at Bådåddjo, Norway

The SUN project will be holding a roundtable discussion panel at NAISA 2024!

Panel Title: Indigenous Survivance: Rethinking Environmental Crisis and Global Colonialism--Overview

Today, climate change and biodiversity loss are remaking the Earth in ways that are threatening human existence. For many, the situation seems unprecedented. For the world’s Indigenous peoples, however, it is yet another crisis. They have already lived through several centuries of colonialism, through shockwaves that have changed the face of our planet, carried tremendous human and environmental consequences, subjected the land to excessive use, and altered climates. Indigenous peoples have become veterans in struggles against intertwined political, ecological, and spiritual crises: loss of homelands, assaults against sovereignty, destruction of habitats, epidemics, and genocidal wars. Yet, against all odds, they have survived, suggesting complex stories of resilience and survivance that need to be told and learned from.

This roundtable seeks to understand Indigenous resilience in the face of the twin forces of colonialism and environmental crisis. In particular, it focuses upon Indigenous strategies of survivance. Survivance, a fusion of survival and resistance, is a concept coined by Anishinaabe scholar Gerald Vizenor to emphasize Indigenous agency involved in the conscious and active process of surviving and resisting colonialism. The discussion accordingly invites participants to consider, side by side, the creative Indigenous strategies that have fuelled Indigenous resilience and resurgence and the harrowing impacts of colonialism and environmental crises that continue to shape Indigenous lives, communities, and cultures around the globe. Likewise, we encourage participants to explore the importance of such critical issues as Indigenous ontologies, art, ritual and traditional ecological knowledge for understanding Indigenous survivance both past and present.

Roundtable discussants: Brenda Child, Mikal Eckstrom, Lindsay Doran, Britt Kramvig, Katarina Pirak Sikku

Chair: Gunlög Fur
Moderators/Commentators: Janne Lahti, Sami Lakomäki

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SUN Project Kickoff and Planning Meet, Växjö
Sep
24
to Sep 26

SUN Project Kickoff and Planning Meet, Växjö

The SUN Formas research team will be meeting at Teleborgs slott, Växjö, Sweden, from 24-26 September! This meeting allows all team members to discuss future projects and scheduling face-to-face, meet with collaborative partners, and outline what the shape of work in the coming several years will take.

The week’s activities include: a tour of Linnaeus University’s beautiful campus and buildings, presentation by LNU’s Centre for Concurrences in Colonial and Postcolonial Studies’ Senior Research fellow Stefan Amirell, teleconference with SUN’s collaborative partners, and extensive planning for current and future projects and events.

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NAAS 2023 Conference: Roundtable Discussion Panel, “Nordic Settlers and Indigenous Peoples: Entanglements and Reverberations”
May
25
to May 27

NAAS 2023 Conference: Roundtable Discussion Panel, “Nordic Settlers and Indigenous Peoples: Entanglements and Reverberations”

Several of our research group members will be attending the Biennial Conference of the Nordic Association for American Studies (NAAS) this month! As per the NAAS 2023 website, the 27th biennial NAAS conference will feature panels and papers that engage with continuities or discontinuities in American social, political, historical, or cultural life or within the field of American studies, as well as presentations on other topics related to American studies.

Members of our group will also be participating in a roundtable discussion panel entitled, “Nordic Settlers and Indigenous Peoples: Entanglements and Reverberations.” The panel will be chaired by Dr. Gunlög Fur, and members include Magdalena Naum, Lindsay E. Doran, Gwen Westerman, Mikal Eckstrom, Sigrid Lien, and Karen V. Hansen.

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Workshop on Nordic Sources to Indigenous Histories
May
24

Workshop on Nordic Sources to Indigenous Histories

24 May, 2023, at Etnografiska Museet, Stockholm, Sweden — Workshop on Nordic Sources to Indigenous Histories!

Workshop Itinerary:

09.00 Presentation of network idea

10.00 Presentations by Gwen Westerman, Glenn Wasicuna and Mikal Eckstrom:
Native American and Settler interactions and the meaning of sources to
contemporary tribal histories. (Coffee break at 10.45)

11.00-12.30 Guided tour of the North American exhibition

12.30 Lunch, restaurant Matmekka

13.30-14.30 Visit to the Museum archive

14.30-15.30 Discussion on collaborative research on collections of sources

15.30-16.00 Coffee break

16.00-17.00 Listing sources and digital platform development

17.30 End of workshop

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