The Khant culture - traditional way of thinking and living in harmony with nature.
Khants' Time is a history book unlike any other. The source material used in this book is historical in the sense that it was collected a hundred years ago by a Finnish scholar U.T. Sirelius, who later became the first Professor of Ethnology at the University of Helsinki. In 1898 the Siberian natural environment was still unspoiled, but the Khants and Mansis who lived in the area had already felt the effects of Western civilization. Because of reduced circumstances, it was predicted that the Khants especially would come under the pressure of modern times. However, there is nothing antiquated in the way the source material is treated in this book. Fieldwork notes written a hundred years ago are analyzed using modern methods. There are three main themes which are dealt with: field work methodology and the concepts of time and folk history; how the Khants measured-time, and how the Khants experienced their own history. This study is in line with current trends in research concerning time. It is proved that nonliterate cultures are not as non-time-conscious as they have often been presented. The way time and history are measured is just different from the ways the majority use. Today, a hundred years after the time when Western scholars rushed to document the traditional ways of livelihood of the peoples of Western Siberia, this area is again of topical interest. Tundra and taiga provide a complex setting for life for the approximately 19,000 Khants living in the area. Natural gas and oil have so far been important natural resources in North-West Siberia. The vast majority of the old-growth forests in Europe are located in Northern Russia. According to a report made by Finnish and Russian environmentalists in 1999, these Russian forests have seemed an endless source of cheap raw material for West European industry. In 1998, the Finnish forest industry for the first time expanded its procurement area to the Khanty-Mansi area. Yet there is still not enough knowledge of the natural resources of these areas, much less the cultural. It is our duty in the West to ensure that the Khant culture is not destroyed by the West's need for natural gas, oil and wood products. This book is one way of taking a glimpse at the traditional Khant way of thinking and living in harmony with nature. Hanna Snellman is a lecturer at the University of Helsinki, Department of Ethnology. Her research interests have mainly dealt with Northern issues and methodologies. The main focus of her studies has been on means of livelihood in areas of forests and great rivers. The topic of her dissertation (1996) was the lumberjacks of Finnish Lapland. She is one of the editors of a Nordic anthology of forest history, Skogsliv (2000).