{"title":"Terror i tvillingtårnene – dystopi og ironi? 9/11 i Darlah og En terrorist i senga","authors":"Kjersti Lersbryggen Mørk","doi":"10.3402/BLFT.V2I0.5839","DOIUrl":null,"url":null,"abstract":"Terror in the Twin Towers – dystopia and irony? 9/11 in Darlah and En terrorist i senga . Through globalization of our media society, children as well as adults are endlessly exposed to information and images from all over the world. In Norway, signs of the terrorist attack on the Twin Towers in USA on September 11th 2001 are now to be found in literature for children and young adults. With globalization theory and post-colonial theory I will examine how two novels present global challenges in general and 9/11 in particular. What does globalization mean for the construction of identity? Who are “we”, and who are “the others”? The novel for young adults, Darlah – 172 timer pa manen [Darlah – 172 hours on the moon] (2008) by Johan Harstad, is a dystopia where 9/11 points forward to a full scale catastrophe for humanity. En terrorist i senga [There's a terrorist in my bed] (2008), a novel for children by Endre Lund Eriksen, makes explicit references to 9/11 – but with playfulness and ironic revelation of xenophobia. Both books use aliens from outer space as “the other”, but where Darlah presents a pessimistic view of our global future, En terrorist i senga is optimistic on behalf of the humankind. Keywords: globalization, identity; national, apocalypse, xenophobia, humour, Norwegian children's literature, Johan Harstad, Endre Lund Eriksen","PeriodicalId":426234,"journal":{"name":"Journal of Children’s Literature","volume":"9 1","pages":"0"},"PeriodicalIF":0.0000,"publicationDate":"2011-03-02","publicationTypes":"Journal Article","fieldsOfStudy":null,"isOpenAccess":false,"openAccessPdf":"","citationCount":"1","resultStr":null,"platform":"Semanticscholar","paperid":null,"PeriodicalName":"Journal of Children’s Literature","FirstCategoryId":"1085","ListUrlMain":"https://doi.org/10.3402/BLFT.V2I0.5839","RegionNum":0,"RegionCategory":null,"ArticlePicture":[],"TitleCN":null,"AbstractTextCN":null,"PMCID":null,"EPubDate":"","PubModel":"","JCR":"","JCRName":"","Score":null,"Total":0}
引用次数: 1
摘要
双子塔的恐怖——反乌托邦和讽刺?达拉的9/11和森加的恐怖分子。随着我们媒体社会的全球化,儿童和成人都无休止地接触到来自世界各地的信息和图像。在挪威,2001年9月11日恐怖分子袭击美国双子塔的迹象现在可以在儿童和年轻人的文学作品中找到。通过全球化理论和后殖民理论,我将研究这两部小说是如何呈现全球挑战的,特别是9/11。全球化对身份建构意味着什么?谁是“我们”,谁是“其他人”?约翰·哈尔斯塔德(john Harstad) 2008年出版的《在月球上度过的172小时》(Darlah - 172 timer pa manen)是一部面向年轻人的小说,讲述了一个反乌托邦的故事,其中9/11事件预示着人类将面临一场全面的灾难。恩德·隆德·埃里克森(Endre Lund Eriksen)的儿童小说《En terrorist i senga》(2008)明确提到了9/11事件,但以戏谑和讽刺的方式揭示了仇外心理。两本书都把来自外太空的外星人称为“他者”,但达拉对我们全球的未来持悲观态度,而恩·恐怖分子·森加则代表人类持乐观态度。关键词:全球化;认同;民族主义,天启,仇外心理,幽默,挪威儿童文学,约翰·哈尔斯塔德,恩德·隆德·埃里克森
Terror i tvillingtårnene – dystopi og ironi? 9/11 i Darlah og En terrorist i senga
Terror in the Twin Towers – dystopia and irony? 9/11 in Darlah and En terrorist i senga . Through globalization of our media society, children as well as adults are endlessly exposed to information and images from all over the world. In Norway, signs of the terrorist attack on the Twin Towers in USA on September 11th 2001 are now to be found in literature for children and young adults. With globalization theory and post-colonial theory I will examine how two novels present global challenges in general and 9/11 in particular. What does globalization mean for the construction of identity? Who are “we”, and who are “the others”? The novel for young adults, Darlah – 172 timer pa manen [Darlah – 172 hours on the moon] (2008) by Johan Harstad, is a dystopia where 9/11 points forward to a full scale catastrophe for humanity. En terrorist i senga [There's a terrorist in my bed] (2008), a novel for children by Endre Lund Eriksen, makes explicit references to 9/11 – but with playfulness and ironic revelation of xenophobia. Both books use aliens from outer space as “the other”, but where Darlah presents a pessimistic view of our global future, En terrorist i senga is optimistic on behalf of the humankind. Keywords: globalization, identity; national, apocalypse, xenophobia, humour, Norwegian children's literature, Johan Harstad, Endre Lund Eriksen