For Sweden’s Honor

For Sweden’s Honor
Author: Lance Why
Publisher: Xlibris Corporation
Total Pages: 342
Release: 2012-03-22
Genre: Fiction
ISBN: 1469156024

On the breakwater rocks outside of Malmö Sweden, the horribly mutilated body of a woman is found. Her flesh has been tortured from the body except for the right buttocks where the insignia of Sweden, The Three Crowns, has been tattooed. Awoken from a quiet Sunday morning, Chief Detective Carl Blomqvuist is called to the scene to begin the investigation into the gruesome crime. The identity of the woman is quickly discerned, leading Carl into a wave of international conflict, murder, kidnapping and a baffling manhunt. Based in 1983 Sweden around actual events, "For Sweden's Honor: The Cold War Murders" address's the issues of national sovereignty, national patriotism and the lengths individuals go for national pride.

Swedish Volunteers in the Russo-Finnish Winter War, 1939-1940

Swedish Volunteers in the Russo-Finnish Winter War, 1939-1940
Author: Martina Sprague
Publisher: McFarland
Total Pages: 261
Release: 2014-01-10
Genre: History
ISBN: 0786457538

Sandwiched between Nazi Germany and the "Russian Bear," Sweden walked a diplomatic tightrope on if and how it should support Finland during the Russo-Finnish Winter War. Social and political forces motivated the Swedish leadership to promote neutrality and avoid official military engagement, while at the same time the Swedish Volunteer Corps comprised the largest volunteer combat force (more than 8,200 strong) in any modern war. This book discusses the political background of the 1939-1940 Winter War; setbacks the volunteers suffered due to weather and terrain; and the ever-present fear that war would come to the Scandinavian Peninsula.

Contesting Kurdish Identities in Sweden

Contesting Kurdish Identities in Sweden
Author: B. Eliassi
Publisher: Springer
Total Pages: 220
Release: 2013-07-24
Genre: Political Science
ISBN: 1137282088

Contesting Kurdish Identities in Sweden sheds light on the day-to-day strategies of accommodation and resistance that Kurdish youth use in the face exclusive narratives and structures of belonging and citizenship regimes in the Middle-East and Sweden.

Sweden and Visions of Norway

Sweden and Visions of Norway
Author: Hildor Arnold Barton
Publisher: SIU Press
Total Pages: 284
Release: 2003
Genre: History
ISBN: 9780809324415

H. Arnold Barton investigates Norwegian political and cultural influences in Sweden during the period of the Swedish-Norwegian dynastic union from 1814 to 1905. After a proud medieval past, Norway had come under the Danish crown in the fourteenth century and had been reduced to virtually a Danish province by the sixteenth. In 1814 Denmark relinquished Norway, which became a separate kingdom, dynastically united with Sweden with its own constitutional government. Disputes during the next ninety-one years caused Norway unilaterally to dissolve the tie in 1905. Barton is the first historian to look beyond the cultural conflicts and examine the impact of the union on internal developments, particularly in Sweden. Prior to 1814, Norway, unlike Sweden, had no constitution and only the rudiments of higher culture, yet paradoxically, Norway exerted a greater direct influence on Sweden. Reflecting a society lacking a native nobility, Norway's 1814 constitution was - with the exception of that of the United States - the most democratic in the world. It became the guiding star of Swedish liberals and radicals striving to reform the antiquated system of representation in their parliament. Norway's cultural void was filled with a stellar array of artists, writers, and musicians, led by Bjoornsjerne Boornson, Henrik Ibsen, and Edvard Grieg. From the 1850s through the late 1880s, this wave of Norwegian creativity had an immense impact on literature, art, and music in Sweden. By the 1880s, however, August Strindberg led a revolt against an exaggerated ""Norvegomania"" in Sweden. Barton sees this reaction as a fundamental inspiration to Sweden's intense search for its own cultural character in the highly creative Swedish National Romanticism of the 1890s and early twentieth century.