Fróðskaparrit - 01.01.2006, Side 46

Fróðskaparrit - 01.01.2006, Side 46
44 ONCE WERE MEN without any reference to social and cultural contexts, and the four groups in question represent different new steps forward in the North Atlantic maritime Europeans’ walk through history (Andersen, 1979). Today young people have several competing rep- resentations and ideals of masculinity, all of them relating to ‘non-masculine’ and fem- inine identities as well as to the altemative masculinities. In the end the differences and similari- ties among men and masculinities are dis- cussed and analysed, leading to some con- cluding remarks on contemporary men’s identities and cultural capital. This article is based on the paper Where have the 'Real Men ’gone? - presented at the Nordic Youth Education Seminar Social, Cultural and Individual Capital and Identity in Mikkeli, Finland April 3-6 2006. Methodology A nationwide survey (2003) providing me with essential quantitative data on Faroese youth cultures and lifestyles serves as back- ground material and framework for this text’s composition and main questions. The survey in question was a part of my anthro- pological PhD project. The survey includes all students from 9lh grade (14-15 years old) at all the lower secondary schools (compul- sory) of the Faroe Islands. Around 700 valid questionnaires were received in my survey, carried out with the assistance of Mr P. Weihe, which is an impressive quantitiy in the Faroe Islands. Semi-structured inter- views with pupils from 8th grade in two schools in Thorshavn (2003-4) have also provided me with minor amounts of valu- able information for the analysis of con- temporaiy masculinities. Faroese youth research is a relatively new topic with only a few projects in its repertoire, making it a puzzling task to por- tray young Faroese men of the past. The data material shaping this article is therefore a mix of fíeldwork notes, observations, local media texts (from television, newspapers and the internet), and general reflections on the social and cultural make-up of the Faroe Islands anno 2006. My historical perspec- tive draws from well-known historical and ethnographic documents from the Faroe Is- lands - scientific and popular books, arti- cles, essays, songs, ballads and other sources. This text is discussing selected parts of the data from my PhD research, but is also a portrait of my personal reflections on cer- tain societal issues characterizing Faroese society today. The empirical material openly presented in my text is very limited, too light to justify all my general points, and I con- sider the text to be a qualified starting-point for future in-depth research on young men’s identities and cultural capital i the Faroe Is- lands. It raises more questions than it pres- ents answers. I try out some basic theories by deduction, hoping to contribute to the un- derstanding of the relation between late- modem society and masculine identities in the Faroe Islands. Premodern society Faroe Islanders were usually described as físhermen and sailors, sometime farmers, even whalers, but almost never as modern
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