Distributed for University of British Columbia Press
Silent Knowledge
Reviving Embodied Practice in Sápmi
Silent Knowledge explores a contemporary example of Indigenous cultural revival in Sápmi, the Sámi homeland, to investigate issues of embodied cultural memory.
Drawing on ethnographic fieldwork, Natalia Magnani follows a collaboration between Finnish builders and Sää’m (Skolt Sámi) reindeer herders and fishers of northeastern Finland to build a traditional Petsamo root-sewn boat. As these makers adjust their environmental perceptions and relearn barely remembered root-sewing and woodworking techniques, their restoration of material production suggests a “loud” silent, or tacit, knowledge: uncodified skills and wisdom gained through experience that are socially meaningful and politically empowering.
Silent Knowledge unpacks the social and political dynamics of crafting cultural memory for future generations. Magnani demonstrates embodiment as transformation, showing that embodied practice can mediate tensions over who has the right to shape culture by positioning non-Indigenous participants in supporting roles, while keeping Indigenous people firmly at the center of their own distinct history.