Abstract
The literary interest in Greenland has been growing steadily in recent years. Both the question of the countryʼs secession from Denmark and the handling of imperialism's historical heritage have occupied the public. The author Kim Leine diligently contributes to the debate with his works on the cultural encounters between Danes and Greenlanders. Following an overview of Leine’s description of the coexistence of colonizers and colonized and the political and religious influence of the former on the latter in the beginning of the 18. century this paper discusses how Leine tries to debunk the common perception of Danes as soft colonizers. The main purpose of the article is to investigate how the difference between the two cultures manifests itself in the father-son relations, with a special focus on the interpretation of the act of sacrifice in the biblical story of Abraham and Isaac. The approach is inspired by postcolonial theory.
Highlights
Greenland’s Apostle in The Fight Against Abraham Greenlands – Sacrification Narratives in Kim Leine’s Novel Red Man / Black Man The literary interest in Greenland has been growing steadily in recent years
Forfatteren Kim Leine bidrager flittigt til debatten om Grønland
Hvor mødet mellem det danske og det grønlandske står i fokus, gør han umisforståeligt rede for sit ståsted og i dedikationen af romanen Profeterne i Evighedsfjorden fra 2012 formulerer han også eksplicit sin sympati for Grønlands uafhængighed
Summary
Greenland’s Apostle in The Fight Against Abraham Greenlands – Sacrification Narratives in Kim Leine’s Novel Red Man / Black Man The literary interest in Greenland has been growing steadily in recent years. Hvor mødet mellem det danske og det grønlandske står i fokus, gør han umisforståeligt rede for sit ståsted og i dedikationen af romanen Profeterne i Evighedsfjorden fra 2012 formulerer han også eksplicit sin sympati for Grønlands uafhængighed.
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