Abstract

A Second World War sabotage act targeting the production of Heavy Water (D20, deuterium oxide) in inland Norway, figure among the best known and best-remembered acts of sabotage in Norwegian history. This article considers the various acts of remembrance regarding this event and explores the intermedial intertwining of its trails of memory. It looks at the semi-documentary film released in 1948, the industrial factory turned World Heritage Site, and lastly the different hiking activities known as the Saboteur Marches. A central point is how these different acts of remembrance interact and reinforce each other, resulting in a plethora of media concerned with commemoration.

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