Book contents
- Climate and Literature
- Cambridge Critical Concepts
- Climate and Literature
- Copyright page
- Contents
- Illustrations
- Contributors
- Acknowledgements
- Introduction
- Part I Origins
- Part II Evolution
- Chapter 7 Weather and Climate in the Age of Enlightenment
- Chapter 8 British Romanticism and the Global Climate
- Chapter 9 The Literary Politics of Transatlantic Climates
- Chapter 10 Climate and Race in the Age of Empire
- Chapter 11 Ethereal Women: Climate and Gender from Realism to the Modernist Novel
- Chapter 12 Planetary Climates: Terraforming in Science Fiction
- Chapter 13 The Mountains and Death: Revelations of Climate and Land in Nordic Noir
- Part III Application
- Bibliography
- Index
Chapter 13 - The Mountains and Death: Revelations of Climate and Land in Nordic Noir
from Part II - Evolution
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 31 July 2019
- Climate and Literature
- Cambridge Critical Concepts
- Climate and Literature
- Copyright page
- Contents
- Illustrations
- Contributors
- Acknowledgements
- Introduction
- Part I Origins
- Part II Evolution
- Chapter 7 Weather and Climate in the Age of Enlightenment
- Chapter 8 British Romanticism and the Global Climate
- Chapter 9 The Literary Politics of Transatlantic Climates
- Chapter 10 Climate and Race in the Age of Empire
- Chapter 11 Ethereal Women: Climate and Gender from Realism to the Modernist Novel
- Chapter 12 Planetary Climates: Terraforming in Science Fiction
- Chapter 13 The Mountains and Death: Revelations of Climate and Land in Nordic Noir
- Part III Application
- Bibliography
- Index
Summary
This chapter investigates the uses to which climate is put in a range of Nordic noir novels and films. In the majority of such texts, climate functions as both a feature of particular locales (usually, the stark meteorological and ecological settings associated with the Nordic lands) and a way to emphasise or otherwise give aesthetic expression to human actions. Strikingly, however, a small number of texts could be identified as what Linda Rugg terms ‘ecocrime’ fiction. In these, non-human nature appears as an actant in its own right, for it figures as the victim of crime. However, criminal investigation in these texts is displaced from non-human to human victims, thus deferring inquiry into the non-human and underlining non-human nature as an aporia of meaning or as the site of trauma.
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- Climate and Literature , pp. 212 - 226Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 2019