توضیحاتی در مورد کتاب :
ادبیات نوردیک: تاریخ تطبیقی یک تحلیل تطبیقی چند جلدی از ادبیات منطقه نوردیک است. هر جلد از این پروژه سه جلدی، با گرد هم آوردن ادبیات فنلاند، قاره اسکاندیناوی (سوئد، نروژ، دانمارک، و Spmi)، و منطقه جزیره ای (ایسلند، گرینلند، و جزایر فارو)، چارچوب جدیدی را به خود اختصاص می دهد. که می توان خوشه های مهمی از عملکرد ادبی را شناخت و تحلیل کرد. این جلد اول، گرههای فضایی، توجه خود را به تغییر شکلهای ادبی فضا توسط نویسندگان نوردیک از قرون وسطی تا معاصر اختصاص داده است. این رویکرد به ادبیات نوردیک که حول به تصویر کشیدن «مناظر» و شیوههای فضایی مختلف در داخل و خارج سازماندهی شده است، مفاهیم موجود تاریخ ادبی بهطور موقت خطی و ملی را گسترش میدهد و اجازه میدهد تا پرسشهای مربوط به شباهتها و تفاوتهای منطقهای داخلی بهشدت ظاهر شوند. اقتضای تاریخی مولد «شمال» به عنوان یک فضای ادبی در این تحلیل دقیق متون و عملکردهای ادبی آن آشکار می شود.
فهرست مطالب :
NORDIC LITERATURE: A COMPARATIVE HISTORY VOLUME I: SPATIAL NODES
Editorial page
Title page
LCC data
Table of contents
List of contributors
List of figures
Preface
General project introduction
Is there such a place as Scandinavia?
Language and region
Region as an explanatory space
The framework
The concept of place
Place and literature
Place and region
Scapes and practices
The aim of the framework
Scapes
Landscapes
Fourteenth century and on: Looking back from landscape
Mid-eighteenth to early nineteenth century: The emergence of landscape
Nineteenth century: The dissemination of landscape
Late nineteenth to early twentieth century: Inhabiting the landscape
Twentieth century: Beneath, above, and beyond landscape
Non-Nordic landscape
Point of contact
The domain of Bárður Snæfellsás
Snæfellsjökull from afar
Snæfellsjökull as medium
A guide to Gurre, temporary landscape
Utopias as territories of Swedish modernism
Prelude: Two utopias in classic Scandinavian literature
Urbs, the utopian global city of Ludvig Nordström
The utopia of the planetary nomad of Harry Martinson
The cosmic dystopia of Martinson
The metachronic dystopia of Karin Boye
Shipping: Heterotopias and the reterritorialization of modernism
Jutland and the West Coast as liminal spaces in Danish literature
Denmark’s imagined geography
Blicher’s Jutland
Hans Christian Andersen and the West Coast
Goldschmidt: A Jewish writer’s Danish travels
On the point
The disillusion of the Danish Dream
The postcolonial West Coast
“Far higher mountains”
Ascent
On the hill: The self and the landscape
On the mountaintop: The self and the sublime
Poems of homesickness and longing
Songs about the homeland and national anthems
Descent
South of the South
Hans Christian Andersen in the Grotta Azzurra
Fersen: Decadent Capri
Munthe: Capri paradise
Paradise lost
Waterscapes
Medieval mapping: Landnámabók þeiri
Baroque topography: Nordlands trompet
Going inland: Finnish lakes
Archipelagos and islands
At sea
Modernist techniques: Östersjöar
The tale of a thousand lakes
Lakes and other literary waterscapes
What one can do with lakes in literature
Lakes as national symbols
Erotic tensions on the lake
Spiritual lakes
Rewriting lake scenes
The island in Nordic literature
Archipelago
Emilie Flygare-Carlén’s ‘Rosen på Tistelön’: Crime and punishment in the archipelago
August Strindberg’s ‘I havsbandet’: The creative intellect and its defeat
John Ajvide Lindqvist’s ‘Människohamn’: Loss, love, and faith
Distance and threat: The city and the archipelago
The archipelago as liminal space
There must be a periphery
Far away in the north: J. H. O. Djurhuus
Dano-Faroese literature
Paper boat in rough waters
“Far out in an ocean”
Gunnar Hoydal: A rooted cosmopolitan
Conclusion
The seven seas
Sea histories
Erasure and artistic archaeology
Sea, ship, sailor
Domestic life and maritime life
Antagonism
Compromise
Re-enchantment
Cityscapes
The urban novel
Cityscape as lightscape
Cityscape as wordscape
Beyond the Nordic cityscape
Through the land of ‘lagom’ in literature
“A charming and remarkable intermediate!”
“A town under this town”
“A kick that shattered the glass and broke the frame”
“Though so like Paris…”
“One of the most beautifully located small cities in Sweden”
“What is a pane of glass in this world?”
A city awakens
The student novel
The city walker
Helsinki in the mist
The Great Strike and the Viapori Rebellion
A kaleidoscopic city novel
Conclusion
Walking the city
The didactic traveler
The journalist
The revolutionary
The spiritual wanderer
The vagabond
The bohemian
The sexual woman
The worker
The ‘flâneur’ revisited
The limits of the unlimited
The history-accumulator
The making of Berlin (1800–70)
The modern metropolis: Berlin as a parvenu (1870/71–1914/18)
Fascinating excesses, enchanting order (1914/18–1944)
Cold wars (1945–89)
Berlin as a ‘lieu de mémoire’ (1989/90–2010)
Poets in New York
City of sun and dreams
Between anachronism and synchronism
The howl from America
City of the body
Prose writers in New York
Everything glitters
Lightscapes
Myth and meaning of foreign lightscapes in Nordic literatures 1
“Sun came from the South”
Contrasting domestic lightscapes
Four types of lightscapes
Religion and metaphysics (1500–1870)
The celestial lightscape reaches the Earth
Rhetoric and poetic creativity (1600 to the present)
Self-promoting lightscapes
Lightscapes of cognition (1750–1925)
Myth and meaning of foreign lightscapes in Nordic literatures 2
“I am longing for Italy”
The new literary lightscape
From the touristic gaze to the escapist illusion
Individualized lightscapes
Existential changes
Escapist dreams
Cosmologies
The sea and the city
Qualities of light
Forest-light to field-light
The presence of past light
Shadow lands
Glocalizing the light of Norwg-West
Inner light
The light of labor
Regio Norwg-West, picts takat fra ofven
Light
Millenniumscapes
New Nordic
At the margins of the welfare state
Beyond literary place
Toxic places
Place and the nation
The atomic age and the vision of the global
Chernobyl in the Nordic spatial imagination
Toxicity and the lost pastoral
Toxicity and a globalized sense of place
Toxicity and invisible geographies
Pollution and place
This site is under construction
Imagined communities and planned regions
Negotiating national boundaries in the novel
Bridging the binational binary
The Øresund as global nexus
Øresund noir: Bron/Broen
The ephemerality of the region
Epilogue
Cathartic moments or spatial liberty
Fiction
Gameplay
‘Hamlet’ revisited
Caterpillar and self-reference
Playability: Closing remarks
Introduction
Settling
“And the two shall become one flesh”
Taking land and claiming place in Nordic migrant literature
Emigration and immigration narratives
Contemporary migrant literature
Conclusion
Radical utopianism among Nordic immigrant authors
Dwelling
Dwelling as captivity
The rise of children’s literature
Rural dwelling and the rise of tourism
Seasonal secondary dwellings
Acknowledgements
“Worker ants on the lush bosom of Earth”
Well-ordered households and daily routines
Hard life and bohemian lifestyle in small cabins
Separation from agrarian time-space
Contemporary nostalgia for the agrarian way of life
By land, by sea, by air, by mind
“Tehkös liitto, lintuseni” / Let us strike a bargain, little bird
“Flyttfåglarne” / Birds of passage
Ruoktu Váimmus / Trekways of the Wind
“Tid: en sång om Trojas murar” / Time: A song about the walls of Troy
Conclusion
Exploring
Explorers of the Grand Tour
The literary Arctic
Portraying the journey to the pole
Nansen’s Greenland expedition
The polar avant garde
Explorers as authors
Hybrid genres
Dislocation and identity formation in the work of Isak Dinesen
Absorbing places and the triumph of modernity
Northern bound
Sacralizing
Landscapes of power
Sacralized space in Nordic oral literature
The literary uses of liminal space
The rise of nationalism
Multiethnic challenges
Postcolonial Challenges
Niðaróss cathedral
Nation and sacrifice
Søren Kierkegaard’s ‘Frygt og Bæven’
Henrik Ibsen’s ‘Brand’
Dag Solstad’s ‘Armand V.’: Fotnoter til en uutgravd roman
Kirsten Hammann’s ‘En dråbe i havet’
Legend and liminality
Liminality
Worlding
Fishing for meaning on the Deatnu River
De-framing the indigenous body
Embracing “the mongrel”
Landscape, memory, and culture
Re-framing/De-framing the colonial representation
“Arctic hysteria”
Family albums
Conclusion
Acknowledgements
Works cited
Location index
Person index
توضیحاتی در مورد کتاب به زبان اصلی :
Nordic Literature: A comparative history is a multi-volume comparative analysis of the literature of the Nordic region. Bringing together the literature of Finland, continental Scandinavia (Sweden, Norway, Denmark, and S�pmi), and the insular region (Iceland, Greenland, and the Faroe Islands), each volume of this three-volume project adopts a new frame through which one can recognize and analyze significant clusters of literary practice. This first volume, Spatial nodes, devotes its attention to the changing literary figurations of space by Nordic writers from medieval to contemporary times. Organized around the depiction of various "scapes" and spatial practices at home and abroad, this approach to Nordic literature stretches existing notions of temporally linear, nationally centered literary history and allows questions of internal regional similarities and differences to emerge more strongly. The productive historical contingency of the "North" as a literary space becomes clear in this close analysis of its literary texts and practices.