2021
DOI: 10.22188/kriterium.26
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Framtidens kvinnor. Mognad och medborgarskap i svenska flickböcker 1832–1921

Abstract: The future woman – what would she be like? And what would be her place in society? These questions were explored through stories about girls’ upbringing and education in nineteenth and early twentieth century literature for girls. About the time of the breakthrough of women novelists in the 1830s, books for girls started to be published. They depict everyday games and exhilarating adventures, student life and vocational dreams. By addressing girls directly, these books aimed at both discussing and influencing … Show more

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“…Crises can be perceived as a form of broken contract, but also as growing rifts between societies, groups, and individuals, between species that have long been interdependent and perhaps also-when the very seasons and the foundations of existence are slowly changing-as a break in the relationship between mankind and being, mankind and God. During the so-called Little Ice Age it happened that people who had formerly believed in the pagan Norse gods, the AEsir, in despair and anger desecrated images of the gods who no longer seemed to accept their sacrifices or deliver gifts in return, in the form of summer and the returning sun (Andersson 2011). The rift that runs between generations, species, and communities is also cracking open within us.…”
Section: Metaphor Hope and Other Crucial Methodsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Crises can be perceived as a form of broken contract, but also as growing rifts between societies, groups, and individuals, between species that have long been interdependent and perhaps also-when the very seasons and the foundations of existence are slowly changing-as a break in the relationship between mankind and being, mankind and God. During the so-called Little Ice Age it happened that people who had formerly believed in the pagan Norse gods, the AEsir, in despair and anger desecrated images of the gods who no longer seemed to accept their sacrifices or deliver gifts in return, in the form of summer and the returning sun (Andersson 2011). The rift that runs between generations, species, and communities is also cracking open within us.…”
Section: Metaphor Hope and Other Crucial Methodsmentioning
confidence: 99%