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Träfflista för sökning "AMNE:(HUMANIORA Språk och litteratur Litteraturvetenskap) ;lar1:(hig)"

Search: AMNE:(HUMANIORA Språk och litteratur Litteraturvetenskap) > University of Gävle

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  • Ney, Agneta, 1948- (author)
  • Sigurdstraditionens välkomstmotiv i text och bild
  • 2009
  • In: Fornaldarsagaerne. Myter og virkelighed. - Koebenhavns Universitet : Museum Tusculanums Forlag. - 978 87 635 2579 4 ; , s. 143-152
  • Book chapter (other academic/artistic)
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  • Söderhäll, Bengt (author)
  • Lite gott och blandat
  • 1998
  • In: Gefle Dagblad. - 1103-9302. ; 19 oktober
  • Review (pop. science, debate, etc.)
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  • Farstad, Britt Johanne, 1961- (author)
  • Glaspärlespelaren : Nya världar, etik och androcentrism i Peter Nilsons science fiction-romaner
  • 2013
  • Doctoral thesis (other academic/artistic)abstract
    • This thesis focuses on Peter Nilson’s (1937-1998) science fiction texts, and particularly on how narrative themes and structures in these texts are related to science as well as to the literary tradition of science fiction (SF). The primary texts are the novels Arken (The Ark, 1982), Äventyret (The Adventure, 1989), Rymdväktaren (The Space Guard, 1995), Nyaga (1996) as well as the short story “Kvinnan som ville ha barn med döden” (The Woman Who Wanted a Child With Death, 1987). Nilson was an established astronomer before publishing fiction, and in both novels and essays he joins “the two worlds” of the natural sciences and the humanities. My study of the reception of his work shows that his symbolic capital, his authority as a scientist, was transferred from one field of knowledge to another, thus increasing the value of his SF texts in critics’ eyes. Central to my analyses are the authorial strategies Nilson used when building bridges between natural science and the humanities, in a move evoking the Glass Bead Players in Herman Hesse’s novel The Glass Bead Game. My study shows that, unlike Hesse’s protagonists, the Glass Bead Players in Nilson’s texts accept, or even welcome, extreme consequences of scientific developments, such as the extinction of life as we know it.SF texts are traditionally categorized as either dystopic or utopic depending on the level of pessimism or optimism in their depictions of technology. I suggest instead that dystopic or utopic outcomes in modern SF novels depend on whether the texts build on an aleatoric or a teleological worldview. In aleatoric narratives, humankind is depicted as alone in the universe and thereby responsible for its own destiny. Teleological narratives feature superior, god-like forces from other worlds, which interfere with life on Earth and may elevate humans to higher levels of consciousness. The latter perspective, which is favoured in Nilson’s SF texts, entails that responsibility is removed from humankind since what happens is presented as meant to be. The tropes of the void and of creatio ex nihilo are recurrent in the examined texts, for instance through the use of myths and archetypes containing images of emptiness such as the “creation out of nothing”. Further, Nilson’s characters are often situated in a mental or physical “void” where their knowledge is of no use to them. My readings show that these voids are not empty but contain mythical and archetypal elements which activate obsolete religious ideas and gender models, such as the Logos vision: the creative power of words. This conservative tendency seems all the more surprising and problematic considering that the SF-genre is based on explorations of possible new worlds and beings.
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  • Sandberg, Linn, 1983-, et al. (author)
  • Bouncing off Ove : Old men's readings of the novel A Man Called Ove as a cultural representation of ageing masculinity
  • 2022
  • In: Journal of Aging Studies. - : Elsevier. - 0890-4065 .- 1879-193X. ; 63
  • Journal article (peer-reviewed)abstract
    • In recent years, there has been a rise in portrayals of greying protagonists in popular fiction, often featuring older people in humorous and heart-warming stories. An emerging genre within this literature is the “geezer and grump lit”, a genre where older people are active protagonists, and while often portrayed as grumpy “’usually turn out to have a heart of gold’” (Swinnen, 2019). A notable example of a book in this genre is the internationally bestselling novel A Man Called Ove (2012) by the Swedish author Fredrik Backman. Telling the story of the 59-year-old Ove who sets out to take his own life, the novel can be understood not only as a cultural representation of ageing, but more specifically a cultural representation of ageing masculinity. But how is this popular novel read and responded to by old men themselves? This article builds on a focus group study with Swedish men aged 65–92 who read and discussed A Man Called Ove. The aim of this article is thus to explore how men read the novel and how these readings function as ways of constructing, negotiating and challenging ageing masculinity and the old man as a gendered and aged position. Findings of the study show how discussion of the novel generated a variety of “imaginary positions” through which the participants made sense of what it means to be an old man in contemporary Sweden, including positions such as the active aspiring ageing man, the passive lonely old man, the embodied and vulnerable old man, and the dutiful old man. Future research should explore how other literary genres may provide ways of understanding how old men's gendered and aged subjectivities are constructed.
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  • Result 1-10 of 414
Type of publication
review (305)
book chapter (42)
journal article (36)
conference paper (12)
book (6)
doctoral thesis (6)
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editorial collection (5)
editorial proceedings (1)
other publication (1)
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Type of content
pop. science, debate, etc. (330)
other academic/artistic (51)
peer-reviewed (33)
Author/Editor
Söderhäll, Bengt (291)
Söderhäll, Bengt, 19 ... (31)
Ljungquist, Sarah (19)
Gustavsson, Michael (6)
Farstad, Britt Johan ... (5)
Ståhl, Eva-Britta (4)
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Ney, Agneta, 1948- (3)
Annell, Cecilia, 196 ... (3)
Svensson, Fredrik, 1 ... (3)
Williams, Henrik, 19 ... (2)
Shima, Alan (2)
Brink, Lars (2)
Cananau, Iulian (2)
Qvarnström, Sofi, 19 ... (2)
Gustavsson, Michael, ... (2)
Charpentier Ljungqvi ... (1)
Adams, Jonathan (1)
Rider, Sharon (1)
Godhe, Michael, 1964 ... (1)
Hearn, Jeff, Senior ... (1)
Mansén, Elisabeth, 1 ... (1)
Nilson, Maria, 1965- (1)
Malm, Mats, 1964 (1)
Areskoug, Linn, 1977 ... (1)
Ahlund, Claes, profe ... (1)
Fahlgren, Margaretha ... (1)
Johansson, Anders, F ... (1)
Borgström, Eva, 1955 (1)
Leffler, Yvonne, 195 ... (1)
Óskarsson, Veturliði ... (1)
Lövgren, Karin, 1958 ... (1)
Petrulevich, Alexand ... (1)
Bonnevier, Jenny, 19 ... (1)
Ahlmo-Nilsson, Birgi ... (1)
Holmquist, Ingrid, 1 ... (1)
Lantz, Sandra (1)
Tornborg, Emma (1)
Wahlström, Helena (1)
Isaksson, Malin, Lek ... (1)
Forsgren, Urban (1)
Mårtensson, Lasse, 1 ... (1)
Ågren, Henrik, 1968- (1)
Grimbeek, Marinette, ... (1)
Agrell, Beata, Profe ... (1)
Sandberg, Linn, 1983 ... (1)
Sundqvist, Olof (1)
Wahlström, Helena, 1 ... (1)
Lindqvist, Janne, 19 ... (1)
Lindqvist Grinde, Ja ... (1)
Lindholm / Röjdalen, ... (1)
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University
Uppsala University (19)
Örebro University (3)
Umeå University (2)
Linköping University (2)
University of Gothenburg (1)
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Stockholm University (1)
Malmö University (1)
Södertörn University (1)
Linnaeus University (1)
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Language
Swedish (377)
English (36)
German (1)
Research subject (UKÄ/SCB)
Humanities (414)
Social Sciences (21)
Natural sciences (1)

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