Skip to main content

Lund University Publications

LUND UNIVERSITY LIBRARIES

Turning rural knowledge into “nothing” or “something”

Avendal, Christel LU orcid (2024) Nordic Ruralities p.42-42
Abstract
From the perspective of the Swedish education system, rural knowledge does not seem to be particularly important. Many young people in rural areas have deep and important knowledge that is invisible in school and during school time, both to teachers and to the young people themselves.
This paper examines knowledge used in agriculture and animal husbandry, a type of knowledge that is particularly useful in rural areas but mostly invisible in the education system. Through observations and interviews with students and their teachers in rural Sweden, the paper provides a detailed account of the everyday social processes by which such knowledge is produced as ‘nothing’ (cf. Scott 2019) and occasionally as ‘something’. The empirical... (More)
From the perspective of the Swedish education system, rural knowledge does not seem to be particularly important. Many young people in rural areas have deep and important knowledge that is invisible in school and during school time, both to teachers and to the young people themselves.
This paper examines knowledge used in agriculture and animal husbandry, a type of knowledge that is particularly useful in rural areas but mostly invisible in the education system. Through observations and interviews with students and their teachers in rural Sweden, the paper provides a detailed account of the everyday social processes by which such knowledge is produced as ‘nothing’ (cf. Scott 2019) and occasionally as ‘something’. The empirical basis of the paper is ethnographic data collected during a year and a half of fieldwork in a small village and village school in southern Sweden. The invisibility of Young people’s knowledge is understood here as the result of active practices. Invisibility and nothingness are thus not properties, but outcomes of social processes (Scott 2019). Some knowledge is made invisible, unnecessary and unimportant, while other knowledge is made visible, necessary and important (Burke 2023; Lässig 2016; Proctor & Schiebinger 2008). This paper shows such social practices as they unfold in the everyday lives of young people in rural areas, in and out of school. (Less)
Abstract (Swedish)
From the perspective of the Swedish education system, rural knowledge does not seem to be particularly important. Many young people in rural areas have deep and important knowledge that is invisible in school and during school time, both to teachers and to the young people themselves. This paper examines knowledge used in agriculture and animal husbandry, a type of knowledge that is particularly useful in rural areas but mostly invisible in the education system. Through observations and interviews with students and their teachers in rural Sweden, the paper provides a detailed account of the everyday social processes by which such knowledge is produced as 'nothing' (cf. Scott 2019) and occasionally as 'something'. The empirical basis of the... (More)
From the perspective of the Swedish education system, rural knowledge does not seem to be particularly important. Many young people in rural areas have deep and important knowledge that is invisible in school and during school time, both to teachers and to the young people themselves. This paper examines knowledge used in agriculture and animal husbandry, a type of knowledge that is particularly useful in rural areas but mostly invisible in the education system. Through observations and interviews with students and their teachers in rural Sweden, the paper provides a detailed account of the everyday social processes by which such knowledge is produced as 'nothing' (cf. Scott 2019) and occasionally as 'something'. The empirical basis of the paper is ethnographic data collected during a year and a half of fieldwork in a small village and village school in southern Sweden. The invisibility of young people's knowledge is understood here as the result of active practices. Invisibility and nothingness are thus not properties, but outcomes of social processes (Scott 2019). Some knowledge is made invisible, unnecessary and unimportant, while other knowledge is made visible, necessary and important (Burke 2023; Lässig 2016; Proctor & Schiebinger 2008). This paper shows such social practices as they unfold in the everyday lives of young people in rural areas, in and out of school.

References
Burke, Peter (2023) Ignorance: a global history, Yale University Press, New Haven
Lässig, Simone (2016). The history of knowledge and the expansion of the historical research agenda. Bulletin of the GHI Washington, 59 (Fall 2016), 29–58.
Proctor, Robert N. & Schiebinger, Londa (red.) (2008). Agnotology: the making and unmaking of ignorance. Stanford, Calif.: Stanford University Press
Scott, Susie (2019). The social life of nothing: silence, invisibility and emptiness in tales of lost experience. Abingdon, Oxon: Routledge
(Less)
Please use this url to cite or link to this publication:
author
organization
publishing date
type
Contribution to conference
publication status
published
subject
pages
1 pages
conference name
Nordic Ruralities
conference location
Kiruna, Sweden
conference dates
2024-12-03 - 2024-12-05
language
English
LU publication?
yes
id
b4613989-1490-46b2-b2b4-f6e032b6162d
date added to LUP
2025-10-10 11:02:25
date last changed
2025-10-17 17:04:53
@misc{b4613989-1490-46b2-b2b4-f6e032b6162d,
  abstract     = {{From the perspective of the Swedish education system, rural knowledge does not seem to be particularly important. Many young people in rural  areas have deep and important knowledge that is  invisible in school and during school time, both  to teachers and to the young people themselves. <br/>This paper examines knowledge used in agriculture and animal husbandry, a type of knowledge  that is particularly useful in rural areas but mostly  invisible in the education system. Through observations and interviews with students and their  teachers in rural Sweden, the paper provides a  detailed account of the everyday social processes by which such knowledge is produced as ‘nothing’ (cf. Scott 2019) and occasionally as ‘something’.  The empirical basis of the paper is ethnographic  data collected during a year and a half of fieldwork  in a small village and village school in southern  Sweden. The invisibility of Young people’s knowledge is understood here as the result of active  practices. Invisibility and nothingness are thus not  properties, but outcomes of social processes (Scott 2019). Some knowledge is made invisible, unnecessary and unimportant, while other knowledge is made visible, necessary and important (Burke 2023; Lässig 2016; Proctor &amp; Schiebinger 2008). This paper shows such social practices as they unfold in the everyday lives of young people in rural  areas, in and out of school.}},
  author       = {{Avendal, Christel}},
  language     = {{eng}},
  pages        = {{42--42}},
  title        = {{Turning rural knowledge into “nothing” or “something”}},
  year         = {{2024}},
}