Study on feeling strange in a small community

Study on feeling strange in a small community
New study sheds light on the challenges of living in the Faroe Islands as a foreign national
 
01.09.2019 - 09:12

Social relations in the Faroes are characterised by high levels of familiarity and close social networks, and that can present a challenge to newcomers.

So says Erika Anne Hayfield, a researcher at the faculty of history and social sciences at the University of the Faroe Islands, who co-authored a new study published in the Journal of Intercultural Studies.

The study, titled ‘It’s Like They Have a Cognitive Map of Relations’: Feeling Strange in a Small Island Community, describes the experiences of newcomers, based on interviews with 40 foreign nationals who have been in the Faroes for shorter and longer periods.

Three themes

The study is structured around three main themes. 

1. Strangers in places characterised by high familiarity – how foreigners experience and navigate Faroese networks. 

2. Negotiating place-belongingness – how immigrants negotiate belonging and how relations, security and time impact place-belongingness. 

3. Boundaries of belonging – how language and identity are key sites of tension in creating boundaries, determining who belongs versus who is rendered a familiar stranger.


Translated by prosa.fo

Er kopiera
Nýggjastu sendingar í ÚV
Leygardag 30. november
TEMAPLÁTAN 40, 'Isolation', Toto, 1984
184316
Leygardag 30. november
Jambalaja - 301124
184448
Leygardag 30. november
Upp á tá - 291124
184433
Leygardag 30. november
Upp á tá - 221124
184431
Nýggjastu sendingar í SV
Sunnudag 1. desember
Hvør býr her? (3:4) - teknmálstulkað
184477
Sunnudag 1. desember
Hvør býr her? (2:4) - teknmálstulkað
184471
Sunnudag 1. desember
Hvør býr her? (1:4) - teknmálstulkað
184468
Leygardag 30. november
Kanst tú siga farvæl? (1:2) - teknmálstulkað
184426
Leygardag 30. november
Dagur og vika - teknmálstulkað
184422