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Dark, Difficult, Depressing: Nordic Crime Novels in the Eyes of the Beholder

In: Nordic Consumer Culture

Author

Listed:
  • Pamela Schultz Nybacka

    (Södertörn University)

Abstract

Nordic crime novels have become a phenomenon on the global book market, famous for painting a dark picture of previously idealized societies. The success of Nordic Noir belongs specifically to its reception in Germany, which holds a longstanding interest in all things northern or Scandinavian. Nordic crime novels are translated and packaged in ways to render them with a specific northern ambiance: snowy, solitary, and sinister. Brands then belong with paratext, such as blurbs and cover images that construct a given text. The main argument is that brands like Nordic Noir resonate culture and thrive on the paratextual threshold. This chapter combines interviews with literary agents, an editor, and German-language readers with illustrative examples of paratextual elements of Nordic Noir, and especially Schwedenkrimi. First, the German market was already primed by interest in Noir and regional identity before the emergence of Nordic Noir, creating a backdrop for its reception. For readers, Nordic Noir connects outer and inner landscapes, creating a more nuanced understanding that even “normal” people can become criminal. To conclude, the case of crime novels and Nordic Noir highlights how paratext can bring out symbolic qualities of a text in a way that resonates and reverberates a brand, especially across cultural borders.

Suggested Citation

  • Pamela Schultz Nybacka, 2019. "Dark, Difficult, Depressing: Nordic Crime Novels in the Eyes of the Beholder," Springer Books, in: Søren Askegaard & Jacob Östberg (ed.), Nordic Consumer Culture, chapter 9, pages 193-212, Springer.
  • Handle: RePEc:spr:sprchp:978-3-030-04933-1_9
    DOI: 10.1007/978-3-030-04933-1_9
    as

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