Helén Strömberg; Henrik Eriksson; Elisabeth Dahlborg Lyckhage; Ingrid Jorfeldt; Sune G. Dufwa; Per Ekstrand; Gunnel Svedberg Studentlitteratur AB (2010) Pehmeäkantinen kirja
Robert W. Rix; Lis Møller; Karina Lykke Grand; Anna Lena Sandberg; Cian Duffy; Elisabeth Oxfeldt; Thor J. Mednick; Pikkan V&R Unipress (2018) Pehmeäkantinen kirja
Robert W. Rix; Lis Møller; Karina Lykke Grand; Anna Lena Sandberg; Cian Duffy; Elisabeth Oxfeldt; Thor J. Mednick; Pikkan V&R unipress GmbH (2018) Pehmeäkantinen kirja
Annelie Björkhagen Turesson; Annika Staaf; Elisabeth Arvidsson; Kamila Biszczanik; Lina Corter; Karin Hellfeldt; Monika Ivezic Studentlitteratur AB (2018) Pehmeäkantinen kirja
Cian Duffy; Karina Lykke Grand; Thor J. Mednick; Lis Møller; Elisabeth Oxfeldt; Ilona Pikkanen; Robert W. Rix; Sandberg V&R unipress GmbH (2019) Pehmeäkantinen kirja
Gísli Magnússon; Benedikt Hjartarson; Thor J. Mednick; Lis Møller; Elisabeth Oxfeldt; Anna Lena Sandberg; Kim Simonsen V&R unipress GmbH (2021) Pehmeäkantinen kirja
For all of the scholarship done on postcolonial literatures, little has been applied to Scandinavian writing. Yet, beginning with the onset of tourism beyond Scandinavia in the 1840s, a compelling body of prose works documents Scandinavian attitudes toward foreign countries and further shows how these Scandinavian travelers sought to portray themselves to uncharted cultures. Focusing on Danish and Norwegian travelogues, Elisabeth Oxfeldt traces the evolution of Scandinavian travel writing over two centuries using pivotal texts from each era, including works by Hans Christian Andersen, Knut Hamsun, and Karen Blixen (Isak Dinesen). Oxfeldt situates each one in its historical and geopolitical context, and her close readings delineate how each travelogue reflects Scandinavia's ongoing confrontation between Self and the non-European cultural Other. A long-overdue examination of travel literature produced by some of Denmark and Norway's greatest writers, Journeys from Scandinavia unpacks the unstable constructions of Scandinavian cultural and national identity and, in doing so, complicates the common assumption of a homogeneous, hegemonic Scandinavia.