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Stirring Up Skyr: From Live Cultures to Cultural Heritage

Stirring Up Skyr: From Live Cultures to Cultural Heritage


Title: Stirring Up Skyr: From Live Cultures to Cultural Heritage
Author: Pétursson, Jón Þór
Hafstein, Valdimar Tr.
Date: 2022
Language: English
Scope: 49-74
University/Institute: Háskóli Íslands
University of Iceland
School: Félagsvísindasvið (HÍ)
School of Social Sciences (UI)
Department: Félagsfræði-, mannfræði- og þjóðfræðideild (HÍ)
Faculty of Sociology, Anthropology and Folkloristics (UI)
Series: Journal of American Folklore;135(535)
ISSN: 0021-8715
1535-1882
DOI: https://doi.org/10.5406/15351882.135.535.03
Subject: Menningararfur; Þjóðfræði; Skyr; Mjólkurvörur; Matarmenning; Menningartengd ferðaþjónusta; Ímyndarsköpun; Markaðssetning
URI: https://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11815/5342

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Citation:

Pétursson, J. Þ., Hafstein, V. T. (2022). Stirring up skyr: From live cultures to cultural heritage. Journal of American Folklore, 135(535), 49-74. https://doi.org/10.5406/15351882.135.535.03

Abstract:

In recent years, the Icelandic dairy product skyr has been transformed from an everyday staple to a national food heritage. Skyr is high in protein and low in fat, and its nutritional value accounts for its international success. However, the domestic and international marketing of skyr glide effortlessly from medieval literature to modern healthy living in promoting skyr as a unique, wholesome, and authentic product: heritage food and Iceland's “secret to healthy living.” In this article, we explore how skyr has been recontextualized as heritage through the cultural staging of skyr-making and through branding efforts. It was not until skyr had become a standardized export commodity that people began to fear that action was needed to protect the traditional way of skyr-making. Picking up on the trend of “heritagization,” pioneered by Slow Food (which added skyr to its “Ark of Taste”) and by small farmers catering to tourists, industrial skyr producers have come around to narrating the cultural history of skyr, employing heritage branding to carve out a unique place within the global dairy-scape. We untangle the messy relationships between the local and the global in such heritage efforts by examining how global trends and markets influence people at local levels, impacting the way they think about and act on their own cultural forms, and how the local level, in turn, impacts global flows under the sign of heritage.

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