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From the reindeer path to the highway and back : understanding the movements of Khanty reindeer herders in Western Siberia

Dudeck, Stephan (2012)

 
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Dudeck, Stephan
University of Tartu ; The Estonian National Museum ; The Estonian Literary Museum
2012

Dudeck, Stephan (2012). From the reindeer path to the highway and back : understanding the movements of Khanty reindeer herders in Western Siberia. Journal of ethnology and folkloristics 6 (1), p. 89-105

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Julkaisun pysyvä osoite on
https://urn.fi/URN:NBN:fi:ula-201302271030
Tiivistelmä
The following article* explores the meaning of roads and the practices of movement
for a small group of forest inhabitants in the Western Siberian lowlands on the middle
Ob. The indigenous people known as the Khanty live as reindeer herders, fishermen
and hunters in the midst of oilfields in the Surgut Rayon. The article examines
their emic point of view opposed to the evaluation of the state administration.
Anthropological research can access the mobility of people in two ways. At first
researchers map movement in physical and metaphysical time and space, they
observe and record the practice of movement. The second important source for
anthropological insight is what people say about their practices of movement and
how they evaluate them and the spaces in which they move. The following article
tries to show that these perspectives remain incomplete without a synthesis
of both. The first perspective allows only for a functionalist classification and the
second allows the researcher to be taken in by the black and white pictures of moral
evaluations that render the complexity of everyday life invisible. Only a synthesis
of both, a careful interpretation of indigenous narratives before the background of
social and political circumstances let us understand the practices of movement we
can observe in the everyday life of people.
Khanty reindeer herders try to build up a distance from the world of intruders
and try to defend their autonomy in the forest. By accessing everyday practices and
motivations instead of ready-made explanations it is revealed that the Khanty are
not doomed to adapt to new situations, but they try to negotiate and manipulate
them in their favour. The article tries to prove that one has to skip the objectifying
approach to a hermeneutic one to grasp their abilities to do so.
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