By the Fire
Sami Folktales and Legends
The first English publication of Sami folktales from Scandinavia collected and illustrated in the early twentieth century
Details
By the Fire
Sami Folktales and Legends
ISBN: 9781517904586
Publication date: October 4th, 2022
208 Pages
38
8 x 6
"When the darkness draws [the Sami] to the campfire, when the stew kettle hangs on its sooty chain and steam and smoke rise up through the tent opening to the clouds and night sky, then rest comes, memories slip in, like dreams to a sleeper. . . . The spirit of Fairy Tale perches at the edge of the hearth. The fire hisses, the flames flare and die back. . . Outside in the deepest night wander the dead, the spirits, the evil thoughts one person sends another. . . Here inside the tent is the campfire; here is home, the great safe place."—Emilie Demant Hatt, from the Introduction
"By the Fire offers insights into the fascinating Sami storytelling tradition at a time when folk beliefs met Christianity—where motifs from Cinderella and legends about sea monsters intertwine in milieus as diverse as icy mountains and tobacco fields. Barbara Sjoholm's translation renders these wonderful stories in all their darkness and power."—Coppélie Cocq, Umeå University
"For lovers of folktales, By the Fire makes for wonderful reading, while it also shines a light on an important part of Swedish heritage: the Sami people and their culture."—Swedish Press
"If you are sitting around a fire this Halloween, or just near a fireplace, reading a few of these tales out loud will send a chill down the spine. You might have to get closer to the fire!"—Cliff Cunningham
"This book was unique not only in bringing Sami folktales to the outer world but in including stories by women storytellers about women and children. Up until the 1920s, most folktale collections were stories of men, collected by men, and included tales of greater Scandinavia."—Norwegian American
"For those in Sámi studies who cannot read Danish, By the Fire is useful in both research and classrooms for engaging directly with primary texts in Sámi oral tradition. It is of particular value for those who work with Sámi belief, settler colonialism, and Indigenous feminist studies."—Journal of Folklore Research
"A welcome introduction into the world of Sami storytelling... provides contextual insight to the stories and the storytellers who Demant Hatt interviewed, fundamentally highlighting the richness of Sami storytelling culture."—Gramarye
"A treasury of oddments." —Wall Street Journal
"This book will certainly appeal to a general audience interested in Sámi culture and will make Sámi folklore more accessible to those academics wishing to integrate Sámi materials into research and teaching." —Journal of American Folklore
"Sometimes straightforward and humorous, at other times mysterious, these stories span a wide range of genres and themes: supernatural encounters, fairytales, animal fables, farcical trickster narratives, didactic parables, encounters with menacing enemies such as cannibalistic ogre-like Stallo beings, escape narratives, tragic accounts of oppression, and heroic tales of resistance." —Journal of Finnish Studies
The first English publication of Sami folktales from Scandinavia collected and illustrated in the early twentieth century
Although versions of tales about wizards and magical reindeer from northern Scandinavia are found in European folk and fairytale collections, stories told by the indigenous Nordic Sami themselves are rare in English translation. The stories in By the Fire, collected by the Danish artist and ethnographer Emilie Demant Hatt (1873–1958) during her travels in the early twentieth century among the nomadic Sami in Swedish Sápmi, are the exception—and a matchless pleasure, granting entry to a fascinating world of wonder and peril, of nature imbued with spirits, and strangers to be outwitted with gumption and craft.
Between 1907 and 1916 Demant Hatt recorded tales of magic animals, otherworldly girls who marry Sami men, and cannibalistic ogres or Stallos. Many of her storytellers were women, and the memorable tales included in this collection tell of plucky girls and women who outfox their attackers (whether Russian bandits, mysterious Dog-Turks, or Swedish farmers) and save their people. Here as well are tales of ghosts and pestilent spirits, murdered babies who come back to haunt their parents, and legends in which the Sami are both persecuted by their enemies and cleverly resistant. By the Fire, first published in Danish in 1922, features Demant Hatt’s original linoleum prints, incorporating and transforming her visual memories of Sápmi in a style influenced by the northern European Expressionists after World War I.
With Demant Hatt’s field notes and commentary and translator Barbara Sjoholm’s Afterword (accompanied by photographs), this first English publication of By the Fire is at once a significant contribution to the canon of world literature, a unique glimpse into Sami culture, and a testament to the enduring art of storytelling.
Emilie Demant Hatt (1873–1958) was a Danish artist and ethnographer who lived among the Sami of Swedish Lapland in the first two decades of the twentieth century. Her account of her life during this time was published in English as With the Lapps in the High Mountains: A Woman among the Sami, 1907–1908, translated by Barbara Sjoholm.
Barbara Sjoholm is a writer, editor, and translator of Danish and Norwegian literature. She has written fiction and nonfiction, including Black Fox: A Life of Emilie Demant Hatt, Artist and Ethnographer.
Contents
Translator’s Note
Introduction
Elk, Lucky Reindeer, Reindeer Luck, and Wizardry
Sickness Spirits
Murdered Children
Animals
Folktales
Russian Chudes and Other Enemies
Field Notes and Commentary
Afterword. “Here They Can Still Tell Stories”: Sami Folklore and the Storytellers of By the Fire
Barbara Sjoholm
Selected Bibliography