The Scandinavian Invasion  Paid

Nordic Noir and Beyond

by Richard McCulloch (Edited), William Proctor (Edited)
©2023, Edited Collection, X, 340 Pages
The Arts

HARDCOVER

eBook


«The Scandinavian Invasion offers an important and timely interrogation of Nordic Noir. Putting the concept under a microscope in a series of diverse chapters, it reveals that Nordic Noir is still teeming with vigorous life as it has emerged, proliferated and travelled across borders, becoming in the process a cultural phenomenon that has had significant implications for global television in the new millennium.»

(Sue Turnbull, University of Wollongong)

You might think you know what Nordic Noir is. Brutal crimes. Harsh landscapes. Brilliant but socially dysfunctional protagonists. Stylish knitwear. Yet, as a generic category and cultural phenomenon, Nordic Noir has always been far more complex. The story of its success owes as much to adaptation and evolution as it does to geographical migration or cosmopolitan curiosity.

But how did this happen? What was it about the genre that struck such a chord with international audiences and readers? How did it build on previous trends and influences? And how has the category changed in order to survive in a cutthroat commercial landscape? Has it become less «Nordic »? Less «noir »? Has its proverbial moment in the sun passed?

Featuring twelve original chapters and an editorial introduction, The Scandinavian Invasion brings together leading media and literature scholars from the UK, Denmark and Australia to critically examine how the phenomenon took shape and what we can learn from it. By exploring the cultural, aesthetic and industrial forces that propelled Nordic Noir across borders, the book provides a kaleidoscopic look at a disruptive cultural phenomenon in transition.

Nordic Noir is dead. Long live Nordic Noir!

  • Cover
  • Title
  • Copyright
  • About the editors
  • About the book
  • This eBook can be cited
  • Contents
  • List of Figures
  • Introduction: Nordic Noir Is Dead; Long Live Nordic Noir! Genre, Discourse and the Evolving Cultural Phenomenon (Richard McCulloch and William Proctor)
  • Part I Crossing Bridges: (Trans)national Encounters with Nordic Noir 33
    • 1 Foreign Currency? Branding and Rebranding Nordic Noir Television in the UK (Richard McCulloch and William Proctor)
    • 2 Claiming Jurisdiction: Bron|Broen, Trading TV Fictions and the Geopolitics of Producing Value across Borders (Janet McCabe)
    • 3 Bron|Broen: The Pilot as Space between Cultures and (Re)negotiations of Nordic Noir (Tobias Steiner)
    • 4 Shadows under the Sun: Situating Nordic Noir within an Australian Audiovisual Landscape (Cath Moore)
    • 5 Far Away, So Close: Sydney-Siders Watching Forbrydelsen, Borgen and Bron|Broen (Pia Majbritt Jensen)
    • 6 An Autoethnography of Nordic Noir, or When the ‘Knowing Audience’ Doesn’t Know (Matt Hills)
    • 7 Utopian Noir: Borgen Viewed in Denmark and the UK (Lars Pynt Andersen, Dannie Kjeldgaard and Stine Bjerregaard)
  • Part II Not-So-Nordic, Not-So-Noir? Margins, Hybridity and the Unfolding Genre 201
    • 8 Investigating the Silent Other: Negotiating Difference and Its Absence in Contemporary Scandinavian Crime Fiction (Anne Grydehøj)
    • 9 The Second Wave of Nordic Noir: New Names in the Development of the Genre (Barry Forshaw)
    • 10 Deserted Parks and Empty Swings: Remaking the Disappearing Child in Nordic Crime and Horror (Richard Berger)
    • 11 Building Snowmen: Frozen and/as Nordic Noir (Lindsay Steenberg)
    • 12 From the Inside Out: Collective Perspectives on the Sensation of SKAM (Nanna Kann-Rasmussen, Kristin Veel and Pia Quist)
  • Notes on Contributors
  • Index
Pages:
X, 340
Year:
2023
ISBN (HARDBACK):
9781788740494 (Active)
ISBN (EPUB):
9781788740517 (Active)
ISBN (PDF):
9781788740500 (Active)
ISBN (MOBI):
9781788740524 (Active)
Language:
English
Published:
Oxford, Bern, Berlin, Bruxelles, New York, Wien, 2023. X, 340 pp., 6 fig. col.

Richard McCulloch is Senior Lecturer in Media and Film at the Centre for Participatory Culture, University of Huddersfield.

William Proctor is Associate Professor in Popular Culture at Bournemouth University.

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