Working Together with South Saami Birth Stories – A Collaboration Between a Saami Midwife and a Saami Researcher
This paper presents some results from a community-based project among local South Saami in the Norwegian and Swedish part of Saepmie. I was co-coordinating a two-year community-sponsored project in the community (Røyrvik) in which a local South Saami midwife documented stories from elder Saami...
Váldodahkkit: | , |
---|---|
Materiálatiipa: | Artihkal |
Giella: | English |
Almmustuhtton: |
University of Saskatchewan
2017-07-01
|
Ráidu: | Engaged Scholar Journal |
Fáttát: | |
Liŋkkat: | https://esj.usask.ca/index.php/esj/article/view/61483 |
Čoahkkáigeassu: |
This paper presents some results from a community-based project among local South Saami in the Norwegian and Swedish part of Saepmie. I was co-coordinating a two-year community-sponsored project in the community (Røyrvik) in which a local South Saami midwife documented stories from elder Saami about childbirth in earlier times, both from their own memories and from stories they knew. Her work became an article in a book, and the project helped us to understand much more about childbirth and general living conditions for Saami one to three generations ago in this area. As a PhD candidate, I have complemented her work with a theoretical framework (Indigenous Research Methods, colonial perspective), a historical analysis, and a contemporary context. Apart from presenting an example of stories she was given and how they can give us new knowledge. But I will focus on the meanings, processes, theories and practices of engaged Indigenous community research. I will describe our different methods and the benefit of working together and will point out how it will further research.
|
---|---|
ISSN: | 2369-1190 2368-416X |