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        <title><name key="stougaard_nielsen_jakob" reg="Stougaard-Nielsen, Jakob">Jakob Stougaard-Nielsen</name>.
          <title level="m">Scandinavian Crime Fiction</title>.
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       <author><name key="lingard_john" reg="Lingard, John">John Lingard</name>
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          <name key="holmes_martin" reg="Holmes, Martin">Martin Holmes</name>
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          Marked up to be included in the Scandinavian-Canadian Studies Journal
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         <name key="stougaard_nielsen_jakob" reg="Stougaard-Nielsen, Jakob">Jakob Stougaard-Nielsen</name>.
         <title level="m">Scandinavian Crime Fiction</title>
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       <author><name key="lingard_john" reg="Lingard, John">John Lingard</name></author>
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              Scandinavian-Canadian Studies Journal / Études scandinaves au Canada
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            <imprint><biblScope type="vol">27</biblScope>
              <biblScope type="start-page">203</biblScope>
              <biblScope type="end-page">205</biblScope>
              <date value="2018">2018</date>
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        <keywords><list>
          <item>Stougaard-Nielsen, Jakob</item>
          <item>crime fiction</item>
          <item>mystery</item>
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      <item n="1">Deleted comma and italicized monograph title per editor. <date value="2020-06-22"/></item>
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        MDH: entered editor's proofing corrections 
        <date value="2020-06-22">22nd June 2020</date>
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        MDH: entered general editor’s proofing corrections
        <date value="2018-12-03">3rd December 2018</date>
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        MDH: entered author’s proofing corrections
        <date value="2018-02-05">5th February 2018</date>
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      MDH: started markup 
      <date value="2018-02-05">5th February 2018</date>
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  <text><front><docTitle n="Scandinavian Crime Fiction">
        <titlePart type="Main">
          <name key="stougaard_nielsen_jakob" reg="Stougaard-Nielsen, Jakob">Jakob Stougaard-Nielsen</name>.
         <title level="m">Scandinavian Crime Fiction</title>.
        </titlePart>
        <titlePart type="ReviewedBook">
          <listBibl>
            <bibl>
              <editor><name key="stougaard_nielsen_jakob" reg="Stougaard-Nielsen, Jakob">Jakob Stougaard-Nielsen</name>.</editor>
              <date value="2017">2017</date>.
              <title level="m">Scandinavian Crime Fiction</title>. 
              <pubPlace>London</pubPlace>: <publisher>Bloomsbury</publisher>. 
              <biblScope type="pages">241 pages</biblScope>.
              <note type="ISBN">ISBN: 978-1-4725-2774-5.</note>
            </bibl>
          </listBibl>
        </titlePart>
      </docTitle>
    <docAuthor><name key="lingard_john" reg="Lingard, John">John Lingard</name> retired from teaching English and Drama at Cape Breton University in 2007. A long-time member of the AASSC, he has published articles on Kjeld Abell, Henrik Ibsen, and J. S. Welhaven. His translations of Ibsen’s plays have been performed at the Shaw Festival, the Stratford Ontario Festival, the Milwaukee Chamber Theatre, and the Citadel Theatre. 
   <!--E-mail: <xptr to="blah@blah" type="email"/>.-->
      </docAuthor>
    <titlePart type="short_affil">John Lingard taught English and Drama at Cape Breton University until his retirement in 2007.</titlePart>
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    <p>It is a measure of Scandinavian crime fiction’s international popularity that this is the fifth English-language book on the subgenre I have reviewed for <title level="j">Scandinavian-Canadian Studies</title>. As his title suggests, Stougaard-Nielsenʼs recently published book concentrates on Scandinavian crime fiction (hereafter SCF) from Norway, Sweden, and Denmark.</p>
    
    <p>In keeping with the novels he selects for appraisal, the author’s approach is, in his own term, <cit><q>socio-critical</q> <bibl>88</bibl></cit>. In the early chapters, the book’s focus is the perceived collapse of Sweden’s welfare state or, as Per Albin Hansson optimistically called it in 1928, <cit><q><orig>folkhemmet</orig> <gloss>the people’s home</gloss></q> <bibl>11</bibl></cit>. This leads Stougaard-Nielsen into what I see as his study’s most significant flaw: an excessive concentration on the second half of the twentieth century, especially the 1960s to the 1980s, a time when the cracks in the Swedish welfare state first became too large to ignore. This is a flaw because the study is part of Bloomsbury’s Twenty-First Century Genre Fiction Series (ii), which includes books on apocalyptic fiction and <soCalled>crunch lit.</soCalled> With a few exceptions, 129 of <title level="m">Scandinavian Crime Fiction</title>’s 212 pages (excluding the bibliography and index) are devoted to novels written in the twentieth century. For example, almost 8 pages <cit><bibl>30–37</bibl></cit> are devoted to Anders Bodelsen’s <title level="m">Tænk på et tal</title> (1968) <gloss><title level="m">Think of a Number</title> 1969</gloss> and 22 pages <cit><bibl>39–61</bibl></cit> to Maj Sjöwall and Per Wahlöö’s ten-volume series <title level="m">Roman om et brott</title> (1965-75) <gloss><title level="m">Novel of a Crime</title></gloss>. Even when Stougaard-Nielsen discusses writers whose creative output lay or still lies in the late twentieth to early twenty-first centuries, he selects novels by Gunnar Staalesen and Henning Mankell from the twentieth century. There are ten insightful pages on Stieg Larsson’s <title level="m">Männ som hatar kvinnor</title> (2005) <gloss><title level="m">The Girl with the Dragon Tattoo</title> 2008</gloss> <cit><bibl>100–10</bibl></cit>, but it is not until he makes an unexpected and valuable analysis <cit><bibl>130–34</bibl></cit> of the Gothic crime fiction novel <title level="m">Låt den rätte komma in</title> (2004) <gloss><title level="m">Let the Right One In</title> 2009</gloss> by John Ajide Lindqvist that Stougaard-Nielsen not only moves into this century but begins to treat SCF as literature more than political tracts. </p>
      
      <p>It is, I think, fair to accept the 1990s as a gateway to the twenty-first century, and by far the most rewarding and insightful section of the book is Chapter 6, titled <title level="a">Criminal Peripheries</title> <cit><bibl>139–69</bibl></cit>. Here the author offers us close readings of Peter Høeg’s influential <title level="m">Frøken Smillas fornemmelse for sne</title> (1992) <gloss><title level="m">Miss Smilla’s Feeling for Snow</title> 1993</gloss> and Kerstin Ekman’s <title level="m">Händelser vid vatten</title> (1995) <gloss><title level="m">Blackwater</title> 1995</gloss>. The peripheries in question are Smilla’s native Greenland and, in Ekman’s novel, <cit><q>North Western Jämtland in central Sweden</q> <bibl>156</bibl></cit>. Stougaard-Nielsen demonstrates how subtly Høeg interweaves a strong melodrama involving Denmark’s stranglehold on Inuit culture and its environmentally dangerous exploitation of the ore contained in a meteor that also houses <cit><q>a deadly parasite</q></cit> with the heroine’s ability to <cit><q>read</q></cit> traces left by humanity in ice and snow <cit><bibl>147</bibl></cit>. Ekman’s novel involves murders committed in the early 1970s and in the present day: these are <cit><q>the events by water</q></cit> of her title <cit><q>that destabilize the identities, memories and relationships of those inhabiting the landscape of the criminal periphery</q> <bibl>150</bibl></cit>.</p>
      
      <p>The last chapter <cit><bibl>171–204</bibl></cit> is primarily focused on the new breed of tough female investigators such as Liza Marklund’s journalist Annika Bengtzon and Camilla Läckberg’s Erika Falck. Stougaard-Nielsen also includes detectives from two highly successful TV series: Sarah Lund in Denmark’s <title level="m">Forbrydelsen</title> (2007, 2009, 2012) <gloss><title level="m">The Killing</title></gloss> and Saga Norén in Sweden’s <title level="m">Broen/Bron</title> (2011, 2013, 2015) <gloss><title level="m">The Bridge</title></gloss>. Referring to Lund and Norén, Stougaard-Nielsen writes:
          <cit rend="block">
              <q>They are presented as <q>gender transgressors,</q> imbued with traits that generically belong to male 
              detectives, which is further amplified by their contrasting feminized male colleagues, who are
              emotionally intelligent and primarily devoted to their equally fragile nuclear families.</q> 
              <bibl>181</bibl>
          </cit>
          This is an accurate response to the female-male detective partnership, especially in <title level="m">The Bridge.</title> </p>
      
      <p><title level="m">Scandinavian Crime Fiction</title> is, then, an uneven book. As stated above, it is seriously flawed as a contribution to a series devoted to twenty-first-century genre fiction by Stougaard-Nielsen’s decision to root at least two thirds of his study to novels written in the twentieth century. He also tends to make questionable generalizations. Henning Mankell’s Kurt Wallander is indeed a <cit><q>troubled man,</q></cit> to borrow the title of the last novel in the Wallander series: <title level="m">Den orolige mannen</title> (2009) <gloss><title level="m">The Troubled Man</title> 2011</gloss>, but he is not <cit><q>utterly helpless</q> <bibl>Stougaard-Nielsen 5</bibl></cit>, since he solves all the murders in the series. It is also surprising to find Stougaard-Nielsen referring with apparent agreement to the right-wing British author Roland Huntford’s view that Sweden in the early 1970s is as bad a place to live as Soviet Russia <cit><bibl>5–6</bibl></cit>. Surprising, because this agreement comes after a primarily Marxist-Leninist approach to <title level="m">The Novel of a Crime</title>, itself a socialist series that aims at revealing the <cit><q>perceived fascist nature</q></cit> of Sweden’s welfare state; and even more because Huntford’s claim is simply not true. Sjöwall and Wahlöö would not have been allowed to publish a biting critique of Russia or any country behind the Iron Curtain, whereas in a liberal democracy such as Sweden they could load their guns and fire at the state with impunity. Again, it is disturbing to find anyone in 2017 describing the former Yugoslavia as <cit><q>a communist utopia</q> <bibl>57</bibl></cit>, and I found the author’s attempt to excuse the overt sexism in <title level="m">The Novel of a Crime</title> simply embarrassing <cit><bibl>46–47</bibl></cit>. Yet, this study of SCF includes excellent readings of novels by Høeg and Ekman and of Swedish and Danish TV crime series. </p>
      
      <p>In the last analysis, this is not a book I would recommend to anyone but specialist readers. There are far more reliable studies of the subject, especially Barry Forshaw’s <title level="m">Nordic Noir</title> (2013) and Kerstin Bergman’s <title level="m">Swedish Crime Fiction</title> (2014).  </p>
    
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      <div type="Bibliography">
        <head>REFERENCES</head>
        <listBibl>
          <bibl><author><name reg="Bergman, Kerstin">Bergman, Kerstin</name></author>. <date value="2014">2014</date>. <title level="m">Swedish Crime Fiction: The Making of Nordic Noir</title>. <pubPlace>Milan</pubPlace>: <publisher>Mimesis</publisher>.</bibl>
          
          <bibl><author><name reg="Forshaw, Barry">Forshaw, Barry</name></author>. <date value="2013">2013</date>. <title level="m">Nordic Noir: The Pocket Essential Guide to Scandinavian Crime Fiction, Film &amp; TV</title>. <pubPlace>Harpenden</pubPlace>: <publisher>Pocket Essentials</publisher>.</bibl>
          
          <bibl><author><name reg="Huntford, Roland">Huntford, Roland</name></author>. <date value="1971">1971</date>. <title level="m">The New Totalitarians</title>. <pubPlace>London</pubPlace>: <publisher>Allen Lane</publisher>.</bibl>
          
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