Killing Reindeer: A Spatial Analysis of Nordic States and Nomadic Forms of Life in the Arctic
CEH Virtual Seminar with Gitte du Plessis (Tampere University, Finland)

To conceptualize the violence of the Nordic states in the Arctic, this talk presents a spatial analysis of relationships between Norway, Sweden, and Finland and the Sámi and reindeer inhabiting their northern parts. The analysis is informed by Deleuze and Guattari's concepts of smooth and striated space and examines how the Nordic states, through their striation activities, are perpetrating violence towards nomadic forms of life. Rather than casting the spatial relationships between states and reindeer herders as “land use conflicts,” the talk will shift the focus from competing activities to violence toward one form of life perpetrated by another. Tracing state efforts of bordering, rationalization of reindeer herding as an industry, infrastructure developments, and cultivation of selected predatory lines of flight, the presentation will illuminate an indirect violence that is slowly eliminating nomadic forms of life. This loss highlights that in the sixth great extinction, the world is losing not only distinct biological species but also different forms of life within species. Ultimately, the striation activities of the biopolitical Nordic states, in their narrow focus on Western knowledge regimes, security, profit, and geopolitical positioning for an impending Arctic resource boom, enact a violent and destructive homogenization of what constitutes life.
Gitte du Plessis is an Academy of Finland Postdoctoral Researcher, hosted at the Politics Programme at Tampere University. She is also a visiting post-doc at the Department of Anthropology and Centre for Environmental Humanities at Aarhus University. Her research is centred on relationships between states, ecology, and possibilities for security. She is currently PI of the project "Political ecologies of chemical warfare: Toxicity and bodies in international relations.”