Currently, the traditional ‘cool’ representation of Greenland as a frozen landscape devoid of people and human structures is being challenged by an emerging vision of Greenland as ‘hot’. This article presents and describes these two versions of Greenland, showing how demarcations of what is ‘nature’ and what is ‘culture’ play active roles in representing and performing Greenland in very different ways. The visions of a ‘cool’ and ‘hot’ Greenland may be seen as contesting and contested naturecultures (Latour 1993) that enact Greenland through shifting configurations, making some elements visible while others disappear. By attributing performative capacity to entities which we usually confine to the roles of props or backdrops to human agency...
(Published: May 2016)Citation: Ø. Ravna. “Greenland, Business in the Arctic, the Polar Code and Coas...
Still, twenty-three years after the inception of Home Rule the Greenland society has remnants from D...
The Arctic region is changing. This is an oft-cited statement researcher, policy-makers and the gene...
The Arctic is often perceived as the new resource frontier in a resource hungry world. Many actors b...
Contents: Preface Robert Petersen Continuity and discontinuity in the Political Development of Moder...
This article explores the emergence of Greenland as an Anthropocene island through anthropological f...
In november 1976 the Arctic Centre of the University of Gronlngen organized its third symposium. The...
Outside Greenland, many believe that the Greenlandic name for Greenland means “Land of the People.” ...
New possibilities for economic development have been identified by the Greenland Home Rule Governmen...
In the 1980s and 1990s, museum artefacts originating in Greenland were being sorted, cleaned, photog...
Among the many topical issues dominating international discourse, are climate change, pollution, and...
This doctoral thesis identifies and analyzes narratives of Greenland's future that emerged in the co...
News media helps shape the discourse around natural resource issues, especially rapidly emerging dev...
General discussion of changes in Greenlanders' traditional customs, their economic problems of today...
Climate change in the Arctic has precipitated intense speculation about the ecological, economic, p...
(Published: May 2016)Citation: Ø. Ravna. “Greenland, Business in the Arctic, the Polar Code and Coas...
Still, twenty-three years after the inception of Home Rule the Greenland society has remnants from D...
The Arctic region is changing. This is an oft-cited statement researcher, policy-makers and the gene...
The Arctic is often perceived as the new resource frontier in a resource hungry world. Many actors b...
Contents: Preface Robert Petersen Continuity and discontinuity in the Political Development of Moder...
This article explores the emergence of Greenland as an Anthropocene island through anthropological f...
In november 1976 the Arctic Centre of the University of Gronlngen organized its third symposium. The...
Outside Greenland, many believe that the Greenlandic name for Greenland means “Land of the People.” ...
New possibilities for economic development have been identified by the Greenland Home Rule Governmen...
In the 1980s and 1990s, museum artefacts originating in Greenland were being sorted, cleaned, photog...
Among the many topical issues dominating international discourse, are climate change, pollution, and...
This doctoral thesis identifies and analyzes narratives of Greenland's future that emerged in the co...
News media helps shape the discourse around natural resource issues, especially rapidly emerging dev...
General discussion of changes in Greenlanders' traditional customs, their economic problems of today...
Climate change in the Arctic has precipitated intense speculation about the ecological, economic, p...
(Published: May 2016)Citation: Ø. Ravna. “Greenland, Business in the Arctic, the Polar Code and Coas...
Still, twenty-three years after the inception of Home Rule the Greenland society has remnants from D...
The Arctic region is changing. This is an oft-cited statement researcher, policy-makers and the gene...