TITEL
Barents festivals and the development of local identity
FöRFATTARE
Karlsen, Sidsel
INSTITUTION
Musik och medier / Musikhögskolan
SAMMANFATTNING
The aim of the present study was to investigate how three specific music
festivals, situated in the Barents region, contributed to development of
local identity in their respective host municipalities. The aim was further
explored through three research questions focussing on 1) how the festivals
cooperated with local agents; 2) how the festivals participated in and
contributed to processes of glocalisation; and 3) what kinds of stories that
were told through the festivals about their respective host municipalities.
The festivals investigated was the Festspel i Pite Älvdal (Sweden), the
Festspillene i Nord-Norge (Norway) and the Jutajaiset Folklorefestivaali
(Finland). The study was grounded in modernity theory as well as previous
research on festivals’ contribution to development of local identity.
Concerning the methodological aspects of the study, it was designed using an
embedded multiple case-design, in which each of the festivals constituted
one case and the three research questions functioned as the cases’ units of
analysis. Hence, within-case as well as cross-case analysis was enabled.
The empirical data consisted of field notes from participant observation of
in all 58 festival events; interviews with the festivals’ directors and
official representatives of the festivals’ host municipalities; and
documentation in the form of festival programmes. The findings showed that
all three festivals had extensive cooperation with a wide selection of local
agents or stakeholders but also that the range and profoundness of this
coopera tion seemed to depend on the festival management’s awareness of and
focus towards the necessity of building and maintaining stakeholder
relationships. This awareness seemed further to depend on the festival’s
perceived self-identity, its degree of professionalism and institutional
status. Regarding the participation in and contribution to processes of
glocalisation, 17 aspects were found that were divided into the categories
of reaching out; letting in; facilitating for meetings; and musical
glocalisation. The festivals were seen to be narrators of history as well
as telling meta-narratives about their host municipalities and thereby
producing and reproducing collective self-images. The latter was exemplified
in the Festspel i Pite Älvdal emphasising the local municipality as a centre
in its own reality; the Festspillene i Nord-Norge strengthening the urban
and displaying strong, international bonds; and the Jutajaiset
Folklorefestivaali emphasising connections towards other peripheral and
rural communities.
ISSN 1103-6907 / ISRN LTU-MOP--08/01--SE / NR 2008:01
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