New Dimensions of Diversity in Nordic Culture and Society.
Material type:
- text
- computer
- online resource
- 9781443892377
- 305.8
- HM1271.S34 -- .N493 2016eb
Intro -- Table of Contents -- Acknowledgements -- Editors' Introduction -- I. Diversity in New Media and Popular Culture -- Cultural Amnesia and AIDS -- Diversity and Intimacy in Denmark -- New Faces of a New Phase -- The New Cradle of Western Civilization -- The "Caspian Case" and Its Aftermath -- II. Diversity, Transnationalism, and National Belonging -- An Open Letter to Beatrice Ask -- The Swedish REVA Debate -- Dancing With the Stállu of Diversity -- Did Breivik Care about Race? -- The Specter of Danish Empire -- Statelessness and Belonging -- III. Challenges for Twenty-First Century Nordic Welfare States -- From Diversity to Precarity -- Class Revisited in Contemporary Swedish Literature -- The Representation of Class in Post-Industrial and Multicultural Sweden -- Caregiving Fathers in Norway -- "Still a Lot of Staring and Curiosity" -- Contributors -- Index.
In the new millennium, categories of identity have become particularly destabilized with the emergence of a new generation of people in the Nordic region who demand more dynamic and fluid identities. New Dimensions of Diversity in Nordic Culture and Society reinvestigates the tired concept of "diversity" to make room for dynamic new realities, as well as the ample new questions to which they give rise. This volume assumes diversity to be a fundamental feature of Nordic modernity. Given that the Nordic countries consistently rank among the world's wealthiest, most educated, and most egalitarian, these case studies provide important counter-narratives to prevailing local and global discourses of Nordic-ness. The contributors not only interrogate historical categories of diversity in a Nordic context, including gender, sex, class, ethnicity, and race; they also show how these categories intersect. They examine new forms of, and platforms for, diverse ideas and creative expression, including fluid masculinities, digital cultures, new media, and fashion. They question the terms on which the Nordic region's indigenous peoples, the Sámi and the Greenlandic Inuit, as well as stateless people such as the Kurds, are brought into Nordic discussions of diversity, citizenship, and agency, and analyze the implications of particular neo-nationalist and patriarchal discourses that have emerged since the turn of the century. The book draws from a variety of disciplinary perspectives and interdisciplinary fields, and will spark productive and critical conversations among all with an interest in the national and regional cultures, subcultures, and social dynamics that inform modern life in the Nordic region.
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Electronic reproduction. Ann Arbor, Michigan : ProQuest Ebook Central, 2024. Available via World Wide Web. Access may be limited to ProQuest Ebook Central affiliated libraries.
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