Book Club ONLINE
BackCategory
Social
Start date
Sat, Feb 26 01:00 PM
End date
Sat, Feb 26 02:00 PM
Address / City
5211 N Clark St Chicago
Location
IL, US
This is a free event and you can register by emailing museum@samac.org. The books can be bought in the Museum Store.
Here are the upcoming book club books:
February
Antiphony by Laila Stien
March
Pakkis by Khalid Hussain
About Antiphony
The narrator, a young social scientist who works for a newspaper in Oslo, goes to Northern Norway on leave after a colleague tells her she lacks initiative. On the surface she is supposed to write a book about structural relationships among the Sami (formerly Lapps). However, loneliness, in spite of a good social life with her friends in Oslo, a tense relationship with her own family, and a feeling of stagnation in her career seem to be the main reasons for her going away.
She becomes acquainted with three generations of Sami women, hears their stories and attempts to make sense of them. Soon she loses her role as impartial observer and becomes more involved in their lives. The more she discovers, the less she feels she understands.
The novel presents a wonderful picture of Sami culture in transition and in the face of inevitable outside forces. In this sense it is a much more universal work demonstrating how an indigenous culture reacts to a dominant culture and what happens over the course of a relatively short period. The novel is also an anti- or non-ethnography in a sense, blurring the lines between the center/periphery (narrator/Sami women).
Join Zoom Meeting
https://us02web.zoom.us/j/83441966464
Here are the upcoming book club books:
February
Antiphony by Laila Stien
March
Pakkis by Khalid Hussain
About Antiphony
The narrator, a young social scientist who works for a newspaper in Oslo, goes to Northern Norway on leave after a colleague tells her she lacks initiative. On the surface she is supposed to write a book about structural relationships among the Sami (formerly Lapps). However, loneliness, in spite of a good social life with her friends in Oslo, a tense relationship with her own family, and a feeling of stagnation in her career seem to be the main reasons for her going away.
She becomes acquainted with three generations of Sami women, hears their stories and attempts to make sense of them. Soon she loses her role as impartial observer and becomes more involved in their lives. The more she discovers, the less she feels she understands.
The novel presents a wonderful picture of Sami culture in transition and in the face of inevitable outside forces. In this sense it is a much more universal work demonstrating how an indigenous culture reacts to a dominant culture and what happens over the course of a relatively short period. The novel is also an anti- or non-ethnography in a sense, blurring the lines between the center/periphery (narrator/Sami women).
Join Zoom Meeting
https://us02web.zoom.us/j/83441966464
Organizer
Swedish American Museum
Phone
773.728.8111
Email
museum@samac.org