Looking for redemption in a globalised North:representations of the Arctic in Judith Hermann’s Short Stories Kaltblau (Cold –Blue) and Die Liebe zu Ari Oskarsson (Love for Ari Oskarsson)

This paper explores the literary representation of Iceland and Norway in two short stories by contemporary German writer Judith Hermann. It analyses both the depiction of these countries as part of the globalised western world and the redemptive power they are tentatively ascribed by the author. Con...

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Main Author: Gremler, Claudia
Format: Article in Journal/Newspaper
Language:unknown
Published: 2008
Subjects:
Online Access:https://publications.aston.ac.uk/id/eprint/16099/
https://publications.aston.ac.uk/id/eprint/16099/1/getfile.pdf
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spelling ftunivaston:oai:publications.aston.ac.uk:16099 2024-09-15T17:50:48+00:00 Looking for redemption in a globalised North:representations of the Arctic in Judith Hermann’s Short Stories Kaltblau (Cold –Blue) and Die Liebe zu Ari Oskarsson (Love for Ari Oskarsson) Gremler, Claudia 2008 application/pdf https://publications.aston.ac.uk/id/eprint/16099/ https://publications.aston.ac.uk/id/eprint/16099/1/getfile.pdf unknown https://publications.aston.ac.uk/id/eprint/16099/1/getfile.pdf Gremler, Claudia <https://publications.aston.ac.uk/view/author/gremlerc=40aston=2Eac=2Euk.html> (2008). Looking for redemption in a globalised North:representations of the Arctic in Judith Hermann’s Short Stories Kaltblau (Cold –Blue) and Die Liebe zu Ari Oskarsson (Love for Ari Oskarsson). Nordlit, 23 , pp. 119-130. cc_by_nc_sa Article PeerReviewed 2008 ftunivaston 2024-07-09T14:19:23Z This paper explores the literary representation of Iceland and Norway in two short stories by contemporary German writer Judith Hermann. It analyses both the depiction of these countries as part of the globalised western world and the redemptive power they are tentatively ascribed by the author. Continuing a long German tradition of looking at Scandinavia from an almost colonial perspective, Hermann on the one hand presents these northern countries as a mere extension of central Europe, largely devoid of distinguishing national characteristics. At the same time she makes reference to the topos of the north as a vast and empty space and highlights both the specific arctic nature of the environment and the effect it has on her urban characters, who find themselves on a search for meaning and orientation in a postmodern fragmented world. Despite Hermann's overall sceptical attitude towards her characters' quest for happiness, these northern locations ultimately appear as potential places of self-realisation and enlightenment. Article in Journal/Newspaper Arctic Iceland Aston University: Aston Publications Explorer
institution Open Polar
collection Aston University: Aston Publications Explorer
op_collection_id ftunivaston
language unknown
description This paper explores the literary representation of Iceland and Norway in two short stories by contemporary German writer Judith Hermann. It analyses both the depiction of these countries as part of the globalised western world and the redemptive power they are tentatively ascribed by the author. Continuing a long German tradition of looking at Scandinavia from an almost colonial perspective, Hermann on the one hand presents these northern countries as a mere extension of central Europe, largely devoid of distinguishing national characteristics. At the same time she makes reference to the topos of the north as a vast and empty space and highlights both the specific arctic nature of the environment and the effect it has on her urban characters, who find themselves on a search for meaning and orientation in a postmodern fragmented world. Despite Hermann's overall sceptical attitude towards her characters' quest for happiness, these northern locations ultimately appear as potential places of self-realisation and enlightenment.
format Article in Journal/Newspaper
author Gremler, Claudia
spellingShingle Gremler, Claudia
Looking for redemption in a globalised North:representations of the Arctic in Judith Hermann’s Short Stories Kaltblau (Cold –Blue) and Die Liebe zu Ari Oskarsson (Love for Ari Oskarsson)
author_facet Gremler, Claudia
author_sort Gremler, Claudia
title Looking for redemption in a globalised North:representations of the Arctic in Judith Hermann’s Short Stories Kaltblau (Cold –Blue) and Die Liebe zu Ari Oskarsson (Love for Ari Oskarsson)
title_short Looking for redemption in a globalised North:representations of the Arctic in Judith Hermann’s Short Stories Kaltblau (Cold –Blue) and Die Liebe zu Ari Oskarsson (Love for Ari Oskarsson)
title_full Looking for redemption in a globalised North:representations of the Arctic in Judith Hermann’s Short Stories Kaltblau (Cold –Blue) and Die Liebe zu Ari Oskarsson (Love for Ari Oskarsson)
title_fullStr Looking for redemption in a globalised North:representations of the Arctic in Judith Hermann’s Short Stories Kaltblau (Cold –Blue) and Die Liebe zu Ari Oskarsson (Love for Ari Oskarsson)
title_full_unstemmed Looking for redemption in a globalised North:representations of the Arctic in Judith Hermann’s Short Stories Kaltblau (Cold –Blue) and Die Liebe zu Ari Oskarsson (Love for Ari Oskarsson)
title_sort looking for redemption in a globalised north:representations of the arctic in judith hermann’s short stories kaltblau (cold –blue) and die liebe zu ari oskarsson (love for ari oskarsson)
publishDate 2008
url https://publications.aston.ac.uk/id/eprint/16099/
https://publications.aston.ac.uk/id/eprint/16099/1/getfile.pdf
genre Arctic
Iceland
genre_facet Arctic
Iceland
op_relation https://publications.aston.ac.uk/id/eprint/16099/1/getfile.pdf
Gremler, Claudia <https://publications.aston.ac.uk/view/author/gremlerc=40aston=2Eac=2Euk.html> (2008). Looking for redemption in a globalised North:representations of the Arctic in Judith Hermann’s Short Stories Kaltblau (Cold –Blue) and Die Liebe zu Ari Oskarsson (Love for Ari Oskarsson). Nordlit, 23 , pp. 119-130.
op_rights cc_by_nc_sa
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