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Iceland Imagined Nature Culture And Storytelling In The North Atlantic Weyerhaeuser Environmental Boo Karen Oslund

  • SKU: BELL-2382008
Iceland Imagined Nature Culture And Storytelling In The North Atlantic Weyerhaeuser Environmental Boo Karen Oslund
$ 31.00 $ 45.00 (-31%)

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Iceland Imagined Nature Culture And Storytelling In The North Atlantic Weyerhaeuser Environmental Boo Karen Oslund instant download after payment.

Publisher: University of Washington Press
File Extension: PDF
File size: 1.8 MB
Pages: 279
Author: Karen Oslund
ISBN: 9780295990835, 029599083X
Language: English
Year: 2011

Product desciption

Iceland Imagined Nature Culture And Storytelling In The North Atlantic Weyerhaeuser Environmental Boo Karen Oslund by Karen Oslund 9780295990835, 029599083X instant download after payment.

Iceland, Greenland, Northern Norway, and the Faroe Islands lie on the edges of Western Europe, in an area long portrayed by travelers as remote and exotic--its nature harsh, its people reclusive. Since the middle of the eighteenth century, however, this marginalized region has gradually become part of modern Europe, a transformation that is narrated in Karen Oslund's Iceland Imagined.This cultural and environmental history sweeps across the dramatic North Atlantic landscape, exploring its unusual geography, saga narratives, language, culture, and politics, and analyzing its emergence as a distinctive and symbolic part of Europe. The earliest visions of a wild frontier, filled with dangerous and unpredictable inhabitants, eventually gave way to images of beautiful, well-managed lands, inhabited by simple but virtuous people living close to nature. This transformation was accomplished by state-sponsored natural histories of Iceland which explained that the monsters described in medieval and Renaissance travel accounts did not really exist, and by artists who painted the Icelandic landscapes to reflect their fertile and regulated qualities. Literary scholars and linguists who came to Iceland and Greenland in the nineteenth century related the stories and the languages of the "wild North" to those of their home countries.Karen Oslund is assistant professor of world history at Towson University in Maryland.

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