This book investigates the relationship between storytellers, contexts
and collective tradition, based on an analysis of North Sámi narratives
published in the early 1900s. This study serves as an act of
"revoicing," of recovering voices that had been silenced by the
scientific discourse which enveloped their passage into print. It
highlights the dynamic and conscious choices of narrative strategies
made by these storytellers and the implications of the discourses
expressed in narration. The analysis demonstrates that storytelling is
an elaboration that takes place in negotiation with tradition, genres
and individual preferences. The repertoires of four storytellers are
studied according to a critical discourse analysis from a folkloristic
perspective. Based on a receptionalist approach, this book investigates
the implications of these narratives for the North Sámi community at the
turn of the 20th century. Storytelling appears to have had a set of
functions for community members, from the normative as regards
socialization, information and warning against dangers to the defensive
with the elaboration of a discourse about solidarity, identity and
empowerment.