Fróðskaparrit - 01.01.2006, Side 104

Fróðskaparrit - 01.01.2006, Side 104
102 VILLAGE-DWELLING “taking care of’ (Heidegger, 2000: 33-54), and if we should stay with Heidegger for a moment, this should mean that a home that isn’t taken care of is not an authentic home. Semiotically there is therefore some reason in drawing up a continuum on the “most au- thentic home”: “Childhood-home > Selfbuilt home > Bought home > Rented home” This continuum expresses that the child- hood-home is more authentic than the self- built home, which is more authentic than the bought home etc. When moving out of the parents’ house the selfbuilt home is clearly characterized as the first priority, but cir- cumstances may force one to buy a house instead - which is “good enough” - or even to accept living in a rented home, which is definitely not an acceptable pennanent so- lution for an ambitious young rural family. In a strange way the rented home signals that one is permanently thinking of “moving away” and that one is therefore less loyal towards one’s community. Owning one’s own home is in deed a quite place-tying practice - if we were to follow the concepts presented above. Thereby the demand for home-ownership could easily be seen as a demand for settlers to become place-tied; to “settle”. The generational shift - i.e. growing up and entering parenthood - is one of the major identity-projects of Faroese rural youth, but another important identity-pro- ject is the reflexive restructuration of the lo- cale - e.g. village. This does not necessar- ily mean that the locale has to be extended geographically, even if this is very much the case in the Faroes today - especially through commuting, but that e.g. the village needs to be re-understood and re-thought, follow- ing a notion similar to the “rural restructur- ing” as presented in e.g. Marsden et al■ (1993). The most common re-thinking of the vil- lage is that it shifts from a production-unity to a “coherent set of dwelling-relevant fea- tures”. Another possible re-thinking of the village is to de-construct the village and re- think it as a larger unity - or locale. In the introduction I presented this as a “stretch” of the locale made possible by automobil- ity. But stretching locales has always been an issue, limited only by the available mo- bility-technologies. Historically most of the economic booms in the Faroes have resulted in (or have been a result of?) a construction of regional towns, where the most important cases are Klaksvík that was originally four small agricultural villages (Guttesen, 1996: 52-55; Nielung, 1968: 175-83); Tvøroyri, that is a unity of all the small villages around the Trongisvág-fírth (Jóan Pauli Joensen in Guttesen, 1996: 92-3; Nielung, 1968: 174- 5) and Runavík that is a unity of several of the small villages around the eastem side of the Skála-firth (Finnsson, 2005). Later we have also seen conglomerations of villages in Hvannasund (Bærenholdt, 1991; Jørgen Ole Bærenholdt in Guttesen, 1996: 56-9), around Sundalagið (Guttesen, 1996: 66-7) and in Gøta (Kristiansen, 2005). In this last case there has obviously been a clear shift from the old village-identity based on one of the three markatals-villages towards a united identity for Gøta as a whole. Today young people hardly speak about respec-
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