You may have to Search all our reviewed books and magazines, click the sign up button below to create a free account.
Kassereren i en bank får mistanke om, at et bankkup er forestående. Den dag det sker, har han sin plan klar
None
A multitude of ideas about individual and distributed agency circulated in Scandinavian culture during the 1960s, a period often designated as the early information age. Through an analysis of six novels, this dissertation discusses how prose fiction in and around the 1960s in Norway, Sweden and Denmark responded and contributed to this circulation of ideas of agency. The study argues that a transition is played out in the novels, from an idea of agency as individualistic and possessive, which I designate as melodramatic, towards an idea of agency as distributed and ecodramatic, emerging in an active environment, where multiple agents, human and non-human, co-exist (these concepts are derive...
The Danish love of story-telling is richly demonstrated in this unique anthology of seventeen tales drawn from the canon of Danish literature over the past two hundred years. Together these stories present a unique view of the city of Copenhagen.
Volume 1.
Includes entries for maps and atlases.
Exhaustive compendium by one of the world's foremost experts on the Swedish master covers Bergman's life, his cultural background, his entire artistic career and extensive annotated bibliographies of interviews and critical writings on Bergman.
Denmark Criminal Laws, Regulations and Procedures Handbook - Strategic Information, Regulations, Procedures
Brings into focus central aspects of developments in European film and media culture. Through studies of both film and television the question of national identity, European integration and globalisation is analysed in a both Eastern and Western Europeancontext. This volume also offers several case studies.
The Mystery Fancier, Volume 7 Number 5, September-October 1983, contains: "Bleeding the Fun Out," by Fred Isaac, "German Secondary Literature," by Greg Goode and "The Crime Story in Sweden," by K. Arne Blom.