24.07.2024
102 MIN
English

SON[I]A #406
Liisa-Rávná Finbog

download
timeline
show less/more
00:00
04:10
09:54
22:07
28:28
33:24
36:23
48:52
56:45
61:19
65:39
78:25
91:39
97:44
SON[I]A #406

Sami drum from Nordland or Troms. Photo: Åge Hojem

Liisa-Rávná Finbog is an indigenous Sámi researcher, writer, curator and artist who works at the intersection of art and academia, countering colonial narratives about the Sámi people. She seeks to remedy the legacy of epistemic ignorance resulting from the assimilation policies of Scandinavian—in her case, Norwegian—governments, which have resulted in the erasure of the language, cultural heritage and identity of Sámi communities. To this end, Liisa-Rávná Finbog draws on her training in archaeology and museology as well as her role as a duójar (a storyteller and holder of Saami knowledge). She carries out research into the knowledge system embedded in duodji practices as a theoretical and action framework from which to question museum practices, revitalise Sámi methodologies, and reclaim the knowledge and value systems of indigenous peoples.

In this podcast, we talk with Liisa-Rávná Finbog about napkins, museums, collections, and colonialism, to challenge hierarchies, cultural extractivism, and the hidden violence in any process of cultural assimilation. We also highlight the causal relationship between art and coloniality, questioning the separation between function and aesthetics. Duodji thus emerges as an ancestral practice and knowledge system — that dismantles and emancipates itself from the Western construct of craft, while invoking a dialogical relationship with materiality. We open a portal to understand and share the ways of thinking, being, and existing in interdependence, of the Sámi people.

With the support of:

Co-produced by:

THIS PODCAST IS PART OF NEW PERSPECTIVES FOR ACTION. A PROJECT BY RE-IMAGINE EUROPE, CO-FUNDED BY THE EUROPEAN UNION. Coproduced by Borealis Festival.

Conversation: Anna Ramos. Script: Verónica Lahitte. Sound production: Albert Tarrats. Voice over: pantea. Sounds: Albert Tarrats' sound library.

Image: Sami drum from Nordland or Troms. Photo: Åge Hojem, NTNU Vitenskapsmuseet/NTNU University Museum. Source: Wikipedia.

ATTRIBUTION/NON-COMMERCIAL/SHARE-ALIKE 4.0 INTERNATIONAL (CC BY-NC-SA 4.0)

related episodes

5 highlights
27.12.2024
87 MIN
Spanish
Son[i]a #417
Rember Yahuarcani López
more
In this podcast we talk to Rember Yahuarcani López about what “contemporary indigenous art” means to him, and about his own path to finding his place in the market. From this position, he can speak of himself in the first person, expand the notion of contemporaneity, and preserve and translate the Uitoto worldview and the oral traditions he has inherited, in an attempt to leave the imprint of the ancestral memory of a community in danger of extinction. And in this sense painting—like myths—emerges as a magical activity. 
show more show less
Son[i]a coloniality Creative Commons indigenous contemporary art indigenous movements Rember Yahuarcani López
02.12.2024
52 MIN
English
Son[i]a #415
Stine Janvin
more
Norwegian vocalist and interdisciplinary artist Stine Janvin works with the voice as a tool and as raw material. Janvin explores the potential of the voice, challenging conventions, traditions, and formats, in a sound universe that warps and bends musical genres from electronica to folk. In this podcast, we talk to Stine Janvin about needlework, about family memories and medieval stories, and about the pleasures of gossip, against the backdrop of Norway’s modern identity-building project. We also look at Janvin’s recent immersion in and updating of the liksong (sung funeral service, literally, “corpse song”) tradition from south-western Norway. In her practice, tradition, popular culture, and identity are reinterpreted, updated and stretched through multiple strategies.
show more show less
Son[i]a death knitting liksong Norwegian folklore Stine Janvin voice
12.09.2024
77 MIN
Spanish
SON[I]A #408
Seba Calfuqueo
more
In this podcast, Seba Calfuqueo dismantles heroes, monuments and categories, while reclaiming gaps, taboos and the elements as spaces of complexity from which to strike up conversation. They also talk about owning where you come from and the position from which you speak. And they argue for the collective occupation of spaces that have historically been denied to the Mapuche people. For Seba, being Mapuche means having a connection with the land, and in this conversation they present a way of understanding of life in which queerness is the very essence of nature.
show more show less
Son[i]a collective creation coloniality Creative Commons indigenous movements land struggles more-than-human Non-human agency queer Seba Calfuqueo trans
27.05.2024
71 MIN
Spanish
SON[I]A #402
Eva Maria Fjellheim
more

In this podcast, Southern Saami researcher Eva Maria Fjellheim takes a close, personal experience—a photograph of her great-grandmother from her family album—as a point of departure to unpack the racist and colonial logics that gave rise to the stigma attached to Saami identity, and the prejudices that remain latent today. We talk about epistemicide, strategic ignorance and green colonialism, about ancestral practices that outlast us, and about the territory as a body.

show more show less
12.09.2019
67 MIN
Spanish
Son[i]a #297
Aura Cumes
more

Aura Cumes charts a lucid historical path through colonial processes, analysing the mechanisms of control, violence, and dispossession that have perversely shaped the identity of the native-servant, relegated in favour of the progress and well-being of white men, their families, and their capital. Racism and sexism thus progress side by side, in a web of exploitation in which hierarchies often overlap.

show more show less
Son[i]a anti-racism Aura Cumes indigenous movements most listened podcasts 2019
SON[I]A #406 Liisa-Rávná Finbog
Son[i]a
0:00
0:00
Son[i]a
Son[i]a #384
0:00
SON[I]A #406 Liisa-Rávná Finbog
Podcast Title

Title of podcast
Son[i]a #384
0:00
34:58