Fisheries policy and the law of accidents at work
The first episodes of the miniseries “Verbúðin” (IS, 2021), with the underwhelming English distribution title “Blackport”, give an authentic impression of the Icelandic fishing workers’ milieu of the 1980s. In order to stay awake in the fish factory, people take drugs and the after-work parties are fuelled by illegal alcohol and, if necessary, antifreeze. A place where a machine severs the hand from a worker instead of the head from a fish, where a bolt smacks a fisherman in the face due to the carelessness of another worker causing the conveyor belt to rip. One almost feels a little bit of macabre satisfaction when, for a change, a local politician, at the inauguration of a new workshop at the local vocational school, slices his finger off with a band saw. Ultimately, however, the law of a series of occupational injuries perpetuates. Work accidents are a part of work that are seldom depicted. “Blackport” is an exception to the rule and proves that industrial accidents are also suitable dramaturgical elements.
Through the use of archive material in the opening sequences, a grandiose set and the direct visual language, “Blackport” gives us viewers an Icelandic social panorama close to life. Even the sex scenes seem more authentic, especially since the bodies involved are not so far removed from you and I. The story allegedly based on “true events” spans the years 1983 to 1991, and also seems unashamedly close to reality. Footage of the summit between Ronald Reagan and Mikhail Gorbachev in Reykjavík in 1986 provides a contextualising temporal anchor.
To combat overfishing, the Minister of Fisheries introduced a new system of transferable catch quotas in 1983, based on the catches of the previous three years. The scheme, initially temporary, became law in 1990 and was as highly controversial then as it is today, because it favoured industry giants and those who happened to be blessed by ‘fisherman’s luck’. A small number of rich fishing fleet owners, “quota kings”, received a substantial share of the annual quotas, which they could sell at a profit to the other fishermen. In effect, the fishing grounds that had been collectively owned by the Icelandic people became privatised. Nonetheless, the preamble to the Icelandic Fisheries Act states that fish around Iceland belong to the Icelandic people, which in reality is not the case and is in stark contradiction to the rest of the law and in practice.
Against this backdrop, the series describes the rise of Jón (Gísli Örn Garðarsson), from mayor of a small town on the Westfjord’s peninsula to fishing minister and the rise of ambitious secretary/his secret lover Harpa (Nína Dögg Filippusdóttir) to ratings queen to Westfjord’s witch. Together with her husband Grímur (Björn Hlynur Haraldsson), the captain of the town’s only trawler, and a couple of friends, Harpa builds up a veritable fishing empire over the years, despite the prosperity achieved being modest compared to the ‘shoulder-padded’ turbo-capitalism of the 1990s.
The importance of the fishing quota law for Icelandic society becomes clear when one considers that a quarter of the GDP is directly or indirectly attributable to fishing and that fish products account for almost half of all exports. By comparison, small Iceland catches more fish than Great Britain.
In addition to the aforementioned authenticity, which never slips into the documentary but remains rooted in the drama, what reigns above all and beyond its entertainment value is the depiction of the intertwining of family, politics and entrepreneurship. In the microcosm of Iceland, an interplay between families, politics, companies, labour, banks and the media unravels, becoming visible and comprehensible: What is discussed at the kitchen table finds itself in parliament the next day; adultery turns into a public fistfight on a talk show; shutting down an investigative journalist takes just one phone call; the decision of the ratings queen to sell her company leads to the ruin of the community, and so on.
Now, one might argue that all Icelanders can be connected by one or two degrees of separation whereas elsewhere it takes six and therefore the distances to the “Althing”, the Icelandic parliament, are correspondingly brief. Needless to say, the appeal of the series lies precisely in the fact that the individual subsystems or institutions (family, state, public, economy, etc.), embodied by individual characters, directly intertwine and the mutual inter-dependencies become evident. This makes the complexity of capitalism just a little bit more tangible.
It is not the workers on one side and the economy on the other. But as elsewhere, people are wrestling with and against each other the married, the in-laws, the in-love or the hated. Garðarsson (director, writer and leading actor) sums it up in a Variety interview (2022): “Our characters become the embodiment of the system. They become the system and the system becomes them. And through their personal journey, hopefully we get a pretty clear view of what happened.” That these “systems” are not inherently corrupt, ruthless and ambitious appears in flashes here and there. For example, when Harpa feels compelled to break the law for financial reasons and comments on her own behaviour, “I don’t want to [have to] run my business like that.” And yet, like other businesspeople, she often decides against the common good. This scene provides a perfect starting point for discussions about ethical economic action and is a case-study for explaining where capitalism goes wrong
My favourite scene and personal highlight of “Blackport” can also be interpreted through the personification of the systems. In the course of a great reconciliation, Jón, Grímur and Harpa, as well as their friends and partners, get trashed and do all kinds of nonsense that one would hardly believe even the most infantile teenagers could do. When they chuck fish at each other, for example, it is amusing but also embodies the relationship between politics and business; when they stagger into the early shift of the fish factory after a night of drinking and merriment, it is amusing too, but also a backhanded joke by politics and capital on the workers.
The series rightly won the Icelandic Edda Film and Television Award in 2023. It is to be hoped that the creative trio Garðarsson, Filippusdóttir and Haraldsson will take on further highlights of recent Icelandic economic history with the same tried and tested approach and thoroughness. The cod wars of the 1970s between Iceland and Great Britain offer themselves as a prequel, the financial crisis of 2008 with the resulting government crisis as a sequel.
References:
Sigfusson, T., Arnason, R., & Morrissey, K. (2013). The economic importance of the Icelandic fisheries cluster—Understanding the role of fisheries in a small economy. Marine Policy, 39, 154–161.
Gray, Tim S. (ed.) (1998). The Politics of Fishing. London: Palgrave Macmillan.
Linville, JD (Jan 31, 2022). Icelandic Series Mania Winner ‘Blackport’ Brings Political Drama, Severed Limbs to Göteborg, Variety.
Yingst, A., & Skaptadottir, U. D. (2018). Gendered labor in the Icelandic fish processing industry. Maritime Studies, 17(2), 125–132.
Heath, Elizabeth (Feb 8, 2022). How Iceland’s Herring Girls Helped Bring Equality to the Island Nation, Smithsonian Magazine
Blackport (Verbúðin, IS, 2021), Gísli Örn Garðarsson, Trailer, EN Subtitlesl
Blackport / Verbúðin (IS, 2021), filmstill.
© Asgeir Helgi Thrastarson/Vesturport/arte
Blackport / Verbúðin (IS, 2021), filmstill.
© Asgeir Helgi Thrastarson/Vesturport/arte
Blackport / Verbúðin (IS, 2021), filmstill.
© Asgeir Helgi Thrastarson/Vesturport/arte
Blackport / Verbúðin (IS, 2021), filmstill.
© Asgeir Helgi Thrastarson/Vesturport/arte
Blackport / Verbúðin (IS, 2021), filmstill.
© Asgeir Helgi Thrastarson/Vesturport/arte
Fisheries policy and the law of accidents at work
The first episodes of the miniseries “Verbúðin” (IS, 2021), with the underwhelming English distribution title “Blackport”, give an authentic impression of the Icelandic fishing workers’ milieu of the 1980s. In order to stay awake in the fish factory, people take drugs and the after-work parties are fuelled by illegal alcohol and, if necessary, antifreeze. A place where a machine severs the hand from a worker instead of the head from a fish, where a bolt smacks a fisherman in the face due to the carelessness of another worker causing the conveyor belt to rip. One almost feels a little bit of macabre satisfaction when, for a change, a local politician, at the inauguration of a new workshop at the local vocational school, slices his finger off with a band saw. Ultimately, however, the law of a series of occupational injuries perpetuates. Work accidents are a part of work that are seldom depicted. “Blackport” is an exception to the rule and proves that industrial accidents are also suitable dramaturgical elements.
Through the use of archive material in the opening sequences, a grandiose set and the direct visual language, “Blackport” gives us viewers an Icelandic social panorama close to life. Even the sex scenes seem more authentic, especially since the bodies involved are not so far removed from you and I. The story allegedly based on “true events” spans the years 1983 to 1991, and also seems unashamedly close to reality. Footage of the summit between Ronald Reagan and Mikhail Gorbachev in Reykjavík in 1986 provides a contextualising temporal anchor.
To combat overfishing, the Minister of Fisheries introduced a new system of transferable catch quotas in 1983, based on the catches of the previous three years. The scheme, initially temporary, became law in 1990 and was as highly controversial then as it is today, because it favoured industry giants and those who happened to be blessed by ‘fisherman’s luck’. A small number of rich fishing fleet owners, “quota kings”, received a substantial share of the annual quotas, which they could sell at a profit to the other fishermen. In effect, the fishing grounds that had been collectively owned by the Icelandic people became privatised. Nonetheless, the preamble to the Icelandic Fisheries Act states that fish around Iceland belong to the Icelandic people, which in reality is not the case and is in stark contradiction to the rest of the law and in practice.
Against this backdrop, the series describes the rise of Jón (Gísli Örn Garðarsson), from mayor of a small town on the Westfjord’s peninsula to fishing minister and the rise of ambitious secretary/his secret lover Harpa (Nína Dögg Filippusdóttir) to ratings queen to Westfjord’s witch. Together with her husband Grímur (Björn Hlynur Haraldsson), the captain of the town’s only trawler, and a couple of friends, Harpa builds up a veritable fishing empire over the years, despite the prosperity achieved being modest compared to the ‘shoulder-padded’ turbo-capitalism of the 1990s.
The importance of the fishing quota law for Icelandic society becomes clear when one considers that a quarter of the GDP is directly or indirectly attributable to fishing and that fish products account for almost half of all exports. By comparison, small Iceland catches more fish than Great Britain.
In addition to the aforementioned authenticity, which never slips into the documentary but remains rooted in the drama, what reigns above all and beyond its entertainment value is the depiction of the intertwining of family, politics and entrepreneurship. In the microcosm of Iceland, an interplay between families, politics, companies, labour, banks and the media unravels, becoming visible and comprehensible: What is discussed at the kitchen table finds itself in parliament the next day; adultery turns into a public fistfight on a talk show; shutting down an investigative journalist takes just one phone call; the decision of the ratings queen to sell her company leads to the ruin of the community, and so on.
Now, one might argue that all Icelanders can be connected by one or two degrees of separation whereas elsewhere it takes six and therefore the distances to the “Althing”, the Icelandic parliament, are correspondingly brief. Needless to say, the appeal of the series lies precisely in the fact that the individual subsystems or institutions (family, state, public, economy, etc.), embodied by individual characters, directly intertwine and the mutual inter-dependencies become evident. This makes the complexity of capitalism just a little bit more tangible.
It is not the workers on one side and the economy on the other. But as elsewhere, people are wrestling with and against each other the married, the in-laws, the in-love or the hated. Garðarsson (director, writer and leading actor) sums it up in a Variety interview (2022): “Our characters become the embodiment of the system. They become the system and the system becomes them. And through their personal journey, hopefully we get a pretty clear view of what happened.” That these “systems” are not inherently corrupt, ruthless and ambitious appears in flashes here and there. For example, when Harpa feels compelled to break the law for financial reasons and comments on her own behaviour, “I don’t want to [have to] run my business like that.” And yet, like other businesspeople, she often decides against the common good. This scene provides a perfect starting point for discussions about ethical economic action and is a case-study for explaining where capitalism goes wrong
My favourite scene and personal highlight of “Blackport” can also be interpreted through the personification of the systems. In the course of a great reconciliation, Jón, Grímur and Harpa, as well as their friends and partners, get trashed and do all kinds of nonsense that one would hardly believe even the most infantile teenagers could do. When they chuck fish at each other, for example, it is amusing but also embodies the relationship between politics and business; when they stagger into the early shift of the fish factory after a night of drinking and merriment, it is amusing too, but also a backhanded joke by politics and capital on the workers.
The series rightly won the Icelandic Edda Film and Television Award in 2023. It is to be hoped that the creative trio Garðarsson, Filippusdóttir and Haraldsson will take on further highlights of recent Icelandic economic history with the same tried and tested approach and thoroughness. The cod wars of the 1970s between Iceland and Great Britain offer themselves as a prequel, the financial crisis of 2008 with the resulting government crisis as a sequel.
References:
Sigfusson, T., Arnason, R., & Morrissey, K. (2013). The economic importance of the Icelandic fisheries cluster—Understanding the role of fisheries in a small economy. Marine Policy, 39, 154–161.
Gray, Tim S. (ed.) (1998). The Politics of Fishing. London: Palgrave Macmillan.
Linville, JD (Jan 31, 2022). Icelandic Series Mania Winner ‘Blackport’ Brings Political Drama, Severed Limbs to Göteborg, Variety.
Yingst, A., & Skaptadottir, U. D. (2018). Gendered labor in the Icelandic fish processing industry. Maritime Studies, 17(2), 125–132.
Heath, Elizabeth (Feb 8, 2022). How Iceland’s Herring Girls Helped Bring Equality to the Island Nation, Smithsonian Magazine
Blackport (Verbúðin, IS, 2021), Gísli Örn Garðarsson, Trailer, EN Subtitlesl
Blackport / Verbúðin (IS, 2021), filmstill.
© Asgeir Helgi Thrastarson/Vesturport/arte
Blackport / Verbúðin (IS, 2021), filmstill.
© Asgeir Helgi Thrastarson/Vesturport/arte
Blackport / Verbúðin (IS, 2021), filmstill.
© Asgeir Helgi Thrastarson/Vesturport/arte
Blackport / Verbúðin (IS, 2021), filmstill.
© Asgeir Helgi Thrastarson/Vesturport/arte
Blackport / Verbúðin (IS, 2021), filmstill.
© Asgeir Helgi Thrastarson/Vesturport/arte
“Women in the Playpen”. Female Role Models and Swiss Vocational Education
A small but fine exhibition on Swiss author Iris von Roten at the Strauhof Literature Museum in Zurich, raises questions about inclusion and gender in Swiss vocational education - then and now.
(Un)responsible work — for us
"Living - once really living" (2022) is the British remake of Akira Kurosawa's 1952 classic "Ikiru". The film addresses a central theme of the working world: taking responsibility. Bill Nighy, perhaps in the role of his life, screenwriter Ishiguro and the film itself have been nominated for several British film awards.
Unfiltered working realities. The apprenticeship of a skilled canner
A critical look at archival vocational guidance films can sharpen one's view of major changes in the world of work and occupations. Making, taking a closer look at a Swiss television report on the apprenticeship of canners from the 1960s, worth it.
Dystopias of the working world
After more than a century, Katharina Gruzei's reinterpretation of the very first film in film history, ‘Workers Leaving the Factory’, shows a grim picture of the world of work and gives food for thought: Has the situation of workers deteriorated so much and what kind of worklife are we even heading towards?
Night Mail — The focus on work
"Night Mail" (1936) was commissioned as an image publicity film by the British General Post Office and went down in film history as a ground-breaking documentary. Directors Harry Watt and Basil Wright succeed in creating an ode to workers and modern technology by enriching their naturalistic style within the film with poetic elements and always keeping the human aspect in mind.
Night Mail — The Poetic Gaze
When the eminent film scholar Amos Vogel was forced to flee Vienna to the United States in 1938, the 17-year-old had already made the decision to devote his life to film. One experience that would define his future was a screening of "Night Mail" (1936) and this film still doesn’t fail to impress today.