Fróðskaparrit - 01.01.2006, Side 103

Fróðskaparrit - 01.01.2006, Side 103
BYGDADVØL - HVÍ UNGFÓLK BÚSETAST í FØROYSKUM BYGDUM 101 counterpart in order to survive the various tests that are posed by the critics and self- critics (extemal vs intemal critics); the in- dividuals that do not agree on the particular •dentity-formation but would like to mod- 'fy the identity for what ever reason. Iden- t'ty must be somewhat waterproof in order °ot to seem silly or anacronistic, but then again, identity is something that can be used as a strategic mean for obtaining a goal, e.g. a positive image or a good reputation. Iden- t*ty is surely productive, but may under cer- tain circumstances be “unrealistic” (as op- Posed to “realistic”) and may become a kind °t “cultural makeup” instead of a produc- t've counterpart of the dialectic of local de- velopment. But even if settlers are attracted to places there are still very different ways of being attracted. There is an enormous difference between being forced to dwell in a place and t° choose to dwell in a place. Theoretically " therefore -1 have proposed to distinguish between a person being “place-tieđ” and being “place-connected”. (In Danish 1 use the words “stedsbundet” and “stedstilknyt- tet” and in Faroese 1 would propose words *'he “staðbundin” and “staðknýttur”.) When °ne is place-tied one is determined to belong lo the given place “in etemity”. On the otlier hand, when one is place-connected one does n°t have to stay or move back but may keep llP a belongingness from the distance or one Illay even patch together an everyday that ls based on many different places that Jhereby become functionally integrated i.e. V eommuting. As I mentioned earlier in this . tcle, this latter strategy is very common 111 the Faroes today (see also: Holm, 2004). This means that a community does not nec- essarily need to “tie” people’s loyalties in order to become a succesful place. The suc- cess of a village can also be ensured by “con- necting” people to the village and drawing upon their resources for shorter or longer pe- riods of time; more or less intensively. Another important aspect is that “home” is not necessarily the place where one dwells. Home and dwelling are not neces- sarily the same in a mral Faroese context. “Home” is not always semiotically referring to the “place of dwelling”, but may in some cases be the “place of growing up”. In this way the concept of home may “stay” at the parents’ house even when the youth has moved into a new building. Off course the new house will transform into a home when the young people’s children start to talk about their home in a reflexive manner, but even then the grandparents’ house will func- tion as “another home” or a secondary home, which also refers to the institutional impor- tance of the grandmother or aunt for raising the children. Home should not be under- stood as a house, but rather as the practices that surround the dwelling; i.e. the dwelling practices which refers not only to “being penuanently in a place” but also to the con- tinuous “building of the home”, both phys- ically and symbolically. There are a huge range of other practices than just “being in the house” that constitute the significance of dwelling in a Faroese village. A real village- home needs more than just the space within the four walls to become a “full home”. If we follow the german existential philoso- pher, Martin Heideggers notion on dwelling, we can state that dwelling in fact means
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