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Research ArticleArticles

Climate Change and Denial in Brit Bildøen’s Sju dagar i august

Thorunn Gullaksen Endreson
Scandinavian Studies, July 2024, 96 (3) 70-91; DOI: https://doi.org/10.3368/sca.96.3.70
Thorunn Gullaksen Endreson
Thorunn Gullaksen Endreson is a guest researcher at the Centre for Development and the Environment (SUM) at the University of Oslo. Her most recent publication is “Climate Change and the Carnivalesque in Erlend O. Nødtvedt’s Vestlandet” (2022).
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vol. 96 no. 3 70-91
DOI 
https://doi.org/10.3368/sca.96.3.70
Published By 
University of Wisconsin Press
History 
  • Published online July 15, 2024.
Copyright & Usage 
© 2024 by the Society for the Advancement of Scandinavian Study

Author Information

  1. Thorunn Gullaksen Endreson
  1. Thorunn Gullaksen Endreson (t.g.endreson{at}sum.uio.no) is a guest researcher at the Centre for Development and the Environment (SUM) at the University of Oslo. Her most recent publication is “Climate Change and the Carnivalesque in Erlend O. Nødtvedt’s Vestlandet” (2022).
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Scandinavian Studies: 96 (3)
Scandinavian Studies
Vol. 96, Issue 3
1 Jul 2024
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Climate Change and Denial in Brit Bildøen’s Sju dagar i august
Thorunn Gullaksen Endreson
Scandinavian Studies Jul 2024, 96 (3) 70-91; DOI: 10.3368/sca.96.3.70

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Climate Change and Denial in Brit Bildøen’s Sju dagar i august
Thorunn Gullaksen Endreson
Scandinavian Studies Jul 2024, 96 (3) 70-91; DOI: 10.3368/sca.96.3.70
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  • Article
    • Abstract
    • Denial and Cognitive Dissonance: Theoretical Background
    • Sju dagar i august
    • The Tick Bite: Denial in Miniature
    • Climate Change and Denial
    • Apocalyptic Discourse: The Flood Myth
    • Pastoral and Denial
    • Nature as Antagonist
    • Conclusion
    • Footnotes
    • Works Cited
  • Info & Metrics
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Keywords

  • climate change
  • denial
  • pastoral
  • flood narratives
  • nature-culture dichotomy
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