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[ecrea] The Scandinavian Invasion: Perspectives on Nordic Noir Extended CFP
Sat Sep 06 06:48:02 GMT 2014
Extended CFP: 1st November Deadline
The Scandinavian Invasion: Perspectives on the Nordic Noir Phenomenon
Edited by William Proctor
The crime genre has a long-established history in the Scandinavian
countries: from the ten-part series of novels by Sjöwall and Wahlöö
featuring Inspector Martin Beck to Henning Mankell’s critique of Swedish
society through the lens of the Kurt Wallander novels. Since the
publication of Stieg Larsson’s The Millennium Trilogy in 2005 featuring
anti-heroine, Lisbeth Salander, we have seen the birth of a global
phenomenon that has spread across multiple media windows including
literature, film and, most notably perhaps, television. Authors such as
Jo Nesbo (The Snowman), Lars Kepler (The Hypnotist), Lotte and Søren
Hammer (The Hanging) and more besides, regularly feature in book store
charts and on internet shopping sites. In the UK, BBC Four continue to
champion the genre by airing The Killing, Borgen, and more recently, The
Bridge alongside other series, such as Mammon and Arne Dahl. How can we
begin to account for the popularity of the so-called Nordic Noir genre
in the UK and beyond? How has this impacted other texts outside of the
Scandinavian Peninsula? What can audiences and fan cultures teach us
about this phenomenon? More simply, why Nordic Noir and why now?
The term itself, Nordic Noir, has also grown beyond its initial ambit to
encompass multiple genres rather than restricted to crime or the police
procedural. Arrow Films releases Scandinavian drama on the Nordic Noir
label which includes crime, but also, other genres, such as history
(Anno 1790), for instance. In this way, the genre has expanded in
significant ways as a ‘cultural category’ that is discursively
constructed rather than confined to a limited and finite designation.
Following Jason Mittell, the Nordic Noir genre ‘operates in an ongoing
historical process of category formation genres are constantly in flux,
and thus their analyses must be historically situated’ (2004: xiv).
This collection aims to offer a varied range of perspectives on the
Nordic Noir phenomenon and invites scholars to submit abstracts of 300 –
500 words. I am particularly interested in audiences and fan cultures,
but other avenues of exploration may include (but not limited to):
· Genre analysis.
· History
· Society and Culture.
· Literature, Cinema, Television.
· Non-Crime texts (such as Akta Manniskor or Anno 1790 and so forth).
· Reception and Audiences.
· Gender.
· Sexuality.
· Representation.
· Influence and impact in other cultures.
· The new wave of literature.
· Industry.
· Branding.
All proposals will be considered within the area of Nordic Noir.
Deadlines for abstracts: 1st November. Abstracts to be forwarded to:
(billyproctor /at/ hotmail.co.uk). Please send any queries, ideas etc to the same.
William Proctor
Lecturer in Journalism & Communication
The Media School
Bournemouth University
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