Making Indigeneity

The Beekeeper’s Perspective

  • Greca N. Meloni University of Vienna, Austria
Keywords: authenticity, autochthony, beekeeping, Sardinia, territoriality

Abstract

A new nationalistic concept of ‘autochthony’ has developed in Sardinia in recent decades, which has progressively intertwined with various territorial matters in seeking to affirm an alleged biological authenticity of Sardinia and Sardinians. As a consequence of this sentiment, safeguarding the biodiversity of Sardinia has become a way to ‘purify’ the island from species that are considered symbols of the alleged subordinate role into which Sardinians have been confined since the Savoy regime. In this paper I discuss the role of beekeepers, focusing on how different notions of the autochthonous are used to shape the edges of territoriality. For the Sardinian beekeeper, working within a territory means becoming part of it, linking one’s own history to the history of the place. As such, working with local honeybees is a way to work with the tradition of su connotu (the known). Finally, I show the differences in discourses of territoriality and spatiality among Sardinian beekeepers and how these differences determine a new category of indigeneity that contrasts with the policies of cultural homogenization aiming to build an ‘authentic’ Sardinia.

Author Biography

Greca N. Meloni, University of Vienna, Austria

Greca N. Meloni is a recipient of a DOC Fellowship of the Austrian Academy of Sciences at the Institute of European Ethnology of the University of Vienna. Her research focuses on knowledge and practices of beekeeping in Sardinia (Italy), and the tensions and conflicts that arise — both within the community of beekeepers, and between that community and various regional institutions — in response to issues of environmental resource management and the exploitation of local products. Meloni is interested in museum studies and topics related to cultural heritage.

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