Hasil untuk "History of Northern Europe. Scandinavia"

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DOAJ Open Access 2022
Don't sell tobacco to Dante: scribbled images of Tage Danielsson's Inferno

Alžbeta Jurkovičová

Tage Danielsson's novel Mannen som slutade röka: en psykologisk thriller (The Man Who Quit Smoking: A Psychological Thriller) is a fictional diary of an executive director named Dante Alighieri. Riddled with various scribbles, doodles, and side comments, the work offers a wide range of possibilities for exploring the functions of these visual elements. This paper explores how the integrated text and pictorial expressions function within the context of the stylized diary, and on what scale it realizes the connection between the conventional word and the seemingly automatic, manic, cyclical scribbling and writing.

Germanic languages. Scandinavian languages, History of Northern Europe. Scandinavia
DOAJ Open Access 2022
Eld som slokna? Historiebruk i Storfjorden/Verdsarvsområdet Geirangerfjord

Harald Endre Tafjord

Samandrag Lokalhistorikaren Sakarias Ansok sine artiklar og bøker om folket på dei fråflytta fjell- og fjordgardane i Storfjorden førte til eit auka medvit om ei særeigen livsform som var i ferd med å døy ut. Innverknaden som historieskrivinga hans fekk i samfunnet, var bakgrunn for at verneorganisasjonen Storfjordens Venner vart stifta i 1975, men også viktig for at det kom til ei rekke nye historieframstillingar om dette temaet gjennom bøker og TV-program. Men kva var det som kjenneteikna historiebruken til Ansok, sidan den fekk så stor innverknad, og kva kjenneteiknar historiebruken hjå dei som seinare skreiv om folket på fjell- og fjordgardane?

DOAJ Open Access 2021
Vorwort

Jan Budňák, Veronika Králová, Aleš Urválek

Germanic languages. Scandinavian languages, History of Northern Europe. Scandinavia
DOAJ Open Access 2020
Metaphern als stilistische Textelemente in den Leitartikeln des Mährischen Tagblatts

Michaela Kaňovská

The paper deals with the use of metaphors in newspaper editorials. Using the results of Christa Baldauf's study (1997) as a basis, it gives a short overview of the kinds of conceptual metaphors in a sample of 20 editorials in the daily Mährisches Tagblatt published in the last quarter of the 19th century. Afterwards, it focuses on the description of the conceptual metaphor POLITICS IS WAR / BATTLE. Attention is paid to the expressions themselves and their position in the text.

Germanic languages. Scandinavian languages, History of Northern Europe. Scandinavia
DOAJ Open Access 2018
Missing Links: Politics and the Misrecognition of the Sweden Democrats

Benjamin R. Teitelbaum

ABSTRACT: This article critiques prevailing approaches to the study of the Sweden Democrats political party. It argues that political agendas motivate academic and journalistic commentators to adopt a limited definition of the party in their analyses. More specifically, the article examines a recurring question in studies of the party, namely, to what extent it can be linked to openly race ideological and other right-wing extremist forces in Swedish society. It shows that while ideological connections between the party and other radical nationalists are weak, sociocultural connections are strong. Concluding that these connections are overlooked by scholars because they are less politically incriminating, the article calls for a paradigm shift in the study of the Sweden Democrats, one that addresses the party as the dynamic movement it is.

History of Northern Europe. Scandinavia, Language and Literature
DOAJ Open Access 2016
Het Vriezenveens : Waar komt het vandaan? Waar gaat het heen?

Cor van Bree

The Vriezenveen Dialect. Where Does it Come from? Where Does it Go to? The village of Vriezenveen (not far from Almelo in Twente, an eastern region of the Netherlands) has a dialect that differs from its neighbouring dialects in a number of features. For instance, instead of lengthened vowels in open syllables it can have rising diphthongs whereas the other Twente dialects have centered diphthongs or short vowels more open than the original short ones: ljèvn 'o live' [æ.] opposite to lèëvn [æǝ] of lævvn [æ] (Standard Dutch leven [e.] < [ε]). The riezenveen dialect also has (or had) diphthongs in stein 'stone' [εi], geitn 'to pour', bouk 'book' [ɔu] instead of Twente dialect stèèn [ε.], geetn [e.], book [o.], Standard Dutch steen [e.], gieten [i], boek [u]. These conservative features can be explained by the fact that the inhabitants of Vriezenveen had extensive contacts with the estphalian region through which they travelled on their commercial tours to Russia (Saint Petersburg). In this German region these features can still be found. On the other hand, a form like huus 'house', with [y.] instead of [u.], points in a western direction. Nowadays the young inhabitants of Vriezenveen are adapting their dialect to the more general Twente dialect. This regiolectisation clearly manifested itself during interviews organised in 2012 through 2015.

Germanic languages. Scandinavian languages, History of Northern Europe. Scandinavia

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