Thinking About Indigenous Religions

Liudmila Nikanorova

Welcome to «Thinking About Indigenous Religions», a podcast where scholars, activists, artists, practitioners, and students discuss their understandings and usages of the term indigenous religions. The ambition is to address questions that many of us think of when we are thinking about indigenous religions. Are they the religions of indigenous peoples or a distinct group of religions? Is it a method, a theory, or a research field? Who gets to define indigenous religions? Who has already been defining indigenous religions, and whose voices and claims are yet to be heard and recognized? What makes a practice recognizable as religious and indigenous? This podcast is brought to you by INREL and GOVMAT from the Department of Archaeology, History, Religious Studies and Theology at UiT The Arctic University of Norway. Recording studio and technical support: UiT Result. Musical intro and outro: Lasse Michelsen. Host, editor and logo designer: Liudmila Nikanorova.

Season 1

  1. EPISODE 2

    Episode 2. Putting Sápmi on the Map. Sámi Activism through Art with Elle-Hánsa/Hans Ragnar Mathisen

    In this episode we have the privilege to be joined by Elle-Hánsa, a Sámi artist, cartographer, and indigenous activist, to talk about how, through his art, he became a Sámi activist. Elle-Hánsa is also known as Hans Ragnar Mathisen (his Norwegian name), and Keviselie (a name given to him by his Naga friends and relatives). Elle-Hánsa's first map of Sápmi offered a unique vision of Sápmi without the borders of the nation-states (Norway, Sweden, Finland, Russia), which he took to the World Council of Indigenous Peoples at the Tseshaht Reservation (BC, Canada) in 1975. The map featured Sámi place names, which were previously unknown for many, including Elle-Hánsa himself, who shares with us his personal journey of losing and then learning his mother tongue. Elle-Hánsa introduces us to his ways of map-making, drawings of Sámi drums and the art work featuring  Sámi árran  designed for the cover of the book Indigenous Religion(s): Local Grounds, Global Networks  (Routledge 2020). Visit  Elle-Hánsa's webpage to find his maps, drawings, graphics, poetry and essays. For those who live in Tromsø, you can also visit Elle-Hánsa's exhibition at Bei Jing Home restaurant. This podcast is brought to you by INREL and GOVMAT from the Department of Archaeology, History, Religious Studies and Theology at UiT The Arctic University of Norway. Recording studio and technical support: UiT Result. Musical intro and outro: Lasse Michelsen. Host, editor and logo designer: Liudmila Nikanorova.

    34 min
  2. EPISODE 7

    Episode 7. Indigenous Futures: The Practice of Sovereignty in Nagaland with Arkotong Longkumer and Aheli Moitra

    How does ‘sovereignty’ play out in the Naga areas – on the borders of India and Myanmar – with their rich stories connected to land, and their struggles to survive? How can we think about notions of sovereignty beyond nation-state boundaries, territorial independence, common language, culture, and religion; instead look at the productive ways in which people orient their lives, and politics, across time and space? What are the different ways in which academics and journalists use the languages of human rights, sovereignty, indigeneity or religion? In this episode, Dr Arkotong Longkumer, Senior Lecturer/Programme Director of Religious Studies at the University of Edinburgh, and PhD research fellow in Religious Studies, Aheli Moitra, at UiT-The Arctic University of Norway, talk about their work in the Naga lands - with Christianity, the role of prophecies, with a newspaper, movements for the recognition of Naga rights and participating in international networks, among other things. For more on this topic, read Longkumer's chapter Indigenous Futures: The practice of sovereignty in Nagaland and other places (Routledge 2020) (Open Access). Also check out Longkumer's new book The Greater India Experiment: Hindutva and the Northeast (South Asia in Motion) (Stanford University Press 2021).  This podcast is brought to you by INREL and GOVMAT from the Department of Archaeology, History, Religious Studies and Theology at UiT The Arctic University of Norway. Recording studio and technical support: UiT Result. Musical intro and outro: Lasse Michelsen. Host, editor and logo designer: Liudmila Nikanorova.

    1h 4m

About

Welcome to «Thinking About Indigenous Religions», a podcast where scholars, activists, artists, practitioners, and students discuss their understandings and usages of the term indigenous religions. The ambition is to address questions that many of us think of when we are thinking about indigenous religions. Are they the religions of indigenous peoples or a distinct group of religions? Is it a method, a theory, or a research field? Who gets to define indigenous religions? Who has already been defining indigenous religions, and whose voices and claims are yet to be heard and recognized? What makes a practice recognizable as religious and indigenous? This podcast is brought to you by INREL and GOVMAT from the Department of Archaeology, History, Religious Studies and Theology at UiT The Arctic University of Norway. Recording studio and technical support: UiT Result. Musical intro and outro: Lasse Michelsen. Host, editor and logo designer: Liudmila Nikanorova.