After Smilla : Contemporary Danish Literature on Greenland, a Canon in the Making?

As a result of its significant international circulation, "Frøken Smillas fornemmelse for sne" (1992) by Peter Høeg figures among the most memorable works belonging to contemporary Danish literature on Greenland, and its canonization has been promoted by an enduring scholarly consideration...

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Main Author: F. Turri
Format: Conference Object
Language:English
Published: 2021
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/2434/885697
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spelling ftunivmilanoair:oai:air.unimi.it:2434/885697 2024-02-04T10:00:42+01:00 After Smilla : Contemporary Danish Literature on Greenland, a Canon in the Making? F. Turri F. Turri 2021-11-25 http://hdl.handle.net/2434/885697 eng eng DINO Conference : Nordic Literature and Canonization http://hdl.handle.net/2434/885697 Settore L-LIN/15 - Lingue e Letterature Nordiche info:eu-repo/semantics/conferenceObject 2021 ftunivmilanoair 2024-01-09T23:47:33Z As a result of its significant international circulation, "Frøken Smillas fornemmelse for sne" (1992) by Peter Høeg figures among the most memorable works belonging to contemporary Danish literature on Greenland, and its canonization has been promoted by an enduring scholarly consideration. A similar favor – both on a commercial and an academic level – is now being experienced by postcolonial novels that problematize the notions of Danish and Greenlandic identity; in this regard, Kim Leine and Iben Mondrup are two voices that stand out as ‘high-brow’. The matter is different in the case of another recent trend concerning Grønlandslitteratur, namely ‘Greenlandic’ crime fiction: the genre, which has been flourishing from the 2010’s, is often dismissed as popular, and hardly occurs in academic contexts. In my paper, I will address this opposition between ‘canonized’ and ‘non-canonized’ within contemporary Danish literature on Greenland, focusing on the former. In doing so, I will take into consideration two novels by Leine, "Kalak" (2007) and "Profeterne i Evighedsfjorden" (2012), and one by Mondrup, "Tabita" (2020). The three novels have never been studied comparatively, to my best knowledge, and not in the light of canonization dynamics: I will try to fill this gap with the use of Rakefet Sheffy’s standpoints on the concept of canonicity in Polysystem theory. In particular, I will consider the reasons behind the process of canonization, trying to understand what features tend to be privileged in contemporary Danish literature concerning Greenland and Greenlandic people, and whether these trends can be read through the lens of the current relationships between Denmark and Greenland. Conference Object Greenland greenlandic The University of Milan: Archivio Istituzionale della Ricerca (AIR) Greenland Kalak ENVELOPE(27.055,27.055,70.611,70.611)
institution Open Polar
collection The University of Milan: Archivio Istituzionale della Ricerca (AIR)
op_collection_id ftunivmilanoair
language English
topic Settore L-LIN/15 - Lingue e Letterature Nordiche
spellingShingle Settore L-LIN/15 - Lingue e Letterature Nordiche
F. Turri
After Smilla : Contemporary Danish Literature on Greenland, a Canon in the Making?
topic_facet Settore L-LIN/15 - Lingue e Letterature Nordiche
description As a result of its significant international circulation, "Frøken Smillas fornemmelse for sne" (1992) by Peter Høeg figures among the most memorable works belonging to contemporary Danish literature on Greenland, and its canonization has been promoted by an enduring scholarly consideration. A similar favor – both on a commercial and an academic level – is now being experienced by postcolonial novels that problematize the notions of Danish and Greenlandic identity; in this regard, Kim Leine and Iben Mondrup are two voices that stand out as ‘high-brow’. The matter is different in the case of another recent trend concerning Grønlandslitteratur, namely ‘Greenlandic’ crime fiction: the genre, which has been flourishing from the 2010’s, is often dismissed as popular, and hardly occurs in academic contexts. In my paper, I will address this opposition between ‘canonized’ and ‘non-canonized’ within contemporary Danish literature on Greenland, focusing on the former. In doing so, I will take into consideration two novels by Leine, "Kalak" (2007) and "Profeterne i Evighedsfjorden" (2012), and one by Mondrup, "Tabita" (2020). The three novels have never been studied comparatively, to my best knowledge, and not in the light of canonization dynamics: I will try to fill this gap with the use of Rakefet Sheffy’s standpoints on the concept of canonicity in Polysystem theory. In particular, I will consider the reasons behind the process of canonization, trying to understand what features tend to be privileged in contemporary Danish literature concerning Greenland and Greenlandic people, and whether these trends can be read through the lens of the current relationships between Denmark and Greenland.
author2 F. Turri
format Conference Object
author F. Turri
author_facet F. Turri
author_sort F. Turri
title After Smilla : Contemporary Danish Literature on Greenland, a Canon in the Making?
title_short After Smilla : Contemporary Danish Literature on Greenland, a Canon in the Making?
title_full After Smilla : Contemporary Danish Literature on Greenland, a Canon in the Making?
title_fullStr After Smilla : Contemporary Danish Literature on Greenland, a Canon in the Making?
title_full_unstemmed After Smilla : Contemporary Danish Literature on Greenland, a Canon in the Making?
title_sort after smilla : contemporary danish literature on greenland, a canon in the making?
publishDate 2021
url http://hdl.handle.net/2434/885697
long_lat ENVELOPE(27.055,27.055,70.611,70.611)
geographic Greenland
Kalak
geographic_facet Greenland
Kalak
genre Greenland
greenlandic
genre_facet Greenland
greenlandic
op_relation DINO Conference : Nordic Literature and Canonization
http://hdl.handle.net/2434/885697
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