Research output: Contribution to book/anthology/report/proceeding › Book chapter › Research › peer-review
"It Is Windier Nowadays" : coastal livelihoods and seascape-making in Qeqertarsuaq, West Greenland. / Tejsner, Pelle.
At home on the waves: human habitation of the sea from the mesolithic to today. ed. / Tanya King; Gary Robinson. New York : Berghahn Books, 2019. p. 250-267 (Environmental anthropology and ethnobiology; No. 24).Research output: Contribution to book/anthology/report/proceeding › Book chapter › Research › peer-review
}
TY - CHAP
T1 - "It Is Windier Nowadays"
T2 - coastal livelihoods and seascape-making in Qeqertarsuaq, West Greenland
AU - Tejsner, Pelle
PY - 2019
Y1 - 2019
N2 - Coastal fishermen and whalers on the island of Qeqertarsuaq in Disko Bay, west Greenland, have relied on the harvest of marine resources for the continuation of livelihoods across the generations. More recently, however, Qeqertarsuarmiut and other Inuit residents in other parts of the circumpolar North have increasingly been portrayed as somehow more ‘ exposed’ or ‘ vulnerable’ victims located on the frontline of a geographically determined global crisis narrative about climate change, which inadvertently ignores the reality of coastal livelihoods in the Arctic today. Qeqertarsuarmiut often narrate a different story about their experiences with environmental changes, which is instead rooted in their continued familiarity and engagement with non-human agents (such as winds, sea ice and marine mammals) as these are encountered during seasonal harvesting efforts along the coast. So while environmental fluctuations are certainly observed, interactions with a familiar coastal environment, nevertheless, continue to foster a relationship predicated on an enduring patience and concomitant flexibility towards shifting ice conditions, local weather vagaries and the moods of non-human agents rather than risks or vulnerable exposures.
AB - Coastal fishermen and whalers on the island of Qeqertarsuaq in Disko Bay, west Greenland, have relied on the harvest of marine resources for the continuation of livelihoods across the generations. More recently, however, Qeqertarsuarmiut and other Inuit residents in other parts of the circumpolar North have increasingly been portrayed as somehow more ‘ exposed’ or ‘ vulnerable’ victims located on the frontline of a geographically determined global crisis narrative about climate change, which inadvertently ignores the reality of coastal livelihoods in the Arctic today. Qeqertarsuarmiut often narrate a different story about their experiences with environmental changes, which is instead rooted in their continued familiarity and engagement with non-human agents (such as winds, sea ice and marine mammals) as these are encountered during seasonal harvesting efforts along the coast. So while environmental fluctuations are certainly observed, interactions with a familiar coastal environment, nevertheless, continue to foster a relationship predicated on an enduring patience and concomitant flexibility towards shifting ice conditions, local weather vagaries and the moods of non-human agents rather than risks or vulnerable exposures.
M3 - Book chapter
SN - 9781789201420
T3 - Environmental anthropology and ethnobiology
SP - 250
EP - 267
BT - At home on the waves
A2 - King, Tanya
A2 - Robinson, Gary
PB - Berghahn Books
CY - New York
ER -