Introduction.- Colonialism in Greenland: tradition, governance and legacy.- Structure and premise of the book.- Ethnography, time-portals and the idealization of tradition.- Governing through tradition.- A correct admixture: tradition, and the formation of identity.- Consumption, hysteria, and anxiety: diagnosing the Greenlanders’ vulnerability.- Shame and crime: the effects and afterlife of tradition.- Culture, identity and colonial legacy in the age of Arctic changes.- Bibliography.
Søren Rud is Associate Professor of History at the University of Copenhagen, Denmark. He has published widely on Greenland, colonialism and techniques of governance. Recent publications include 'Policing and Governance in Greenland: Rationalities of police and colonial rule 1860-1953’ in Policing in Colonial Empires: Cases, Connections, Boundaries (ca. 1850–1970).
This book explores how the Danish authorities governed the colonized population in Greenland in the nineteenth and twentieth centuries. Two competing narratives of colonialism dominate in Greenland as well as Denmark. One narrative portrays the Danish colonial project as ruthless and brutal extraction of a vulnerable indigenousness people; the other narrative emphasizes almost exclusively the benevolent aspects of Danish rule in Greenland. Rather than siding with one of these narratives, this book investigates actual practices of colonial governance in Greenland with an outlook to the extensive international scholarship on colonialism and post-colonialism. The chapters address the intimate connections between the establishment of an ethnographic discourse and the colonial techniques of governance in Greenland. Thereby the book provides important nuances to the understanding of the historical relationship between Denmark and Greenland and links this historical trajectory to the present negotiations of Greenlandic identity.