This chapter discusses how Sámi vocal genres can be interpreted in relation to traditional
cosmologies, in particular to the goddesses. The Sámi are recognized as an indigenous people
living in four countries (Norway, Sweden, Finland, and Russia). Such recognition is a result of the
indigenous movement of the 1960s onward in which the revival of joik (a traditional
Sámi vocal genre) was crucial in fostering a pan-Sámi indigenous sensibility. Although
joik continues to play a defining role in representing a pan-Sámi political identity, it is
not widespread across the region now known as Sápmi, the land of the Sámi (map 8.1).
Among the Skolt Sámi in the eastern regions of Sápmi, the traditional vocal genre is
the leu'dd—often a narrative about an individual, which can be
understood as a form of oral history. Leu'dd is regarded as a disappearing vocal tradition,
in contrast to joik, which continues to be preserved, transformed, and recreated for modern
contexts.
Skolt Sámi have been forcibly relocated because of wars, Cold War military policy, and
hydroelectric projects. Male singers have been killed by reindeer poachers, by alcohol abuse, or on
military frontlines. The most recent recording project, undertaken in the mid-1990s, focuses,
therefore, on female singers, for whom the life histories narrated in leu'dd often involve
expressing distressing and overwhelming emotions. In discussing both joik and leu'dd to
explore gender, place, and constructions of pan-Sáminess, this chapter focuses on female
singers, Sámi cosmologies, and Sámi feminist theorization.