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2 - Iceland

from Part One - Europe

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  05 August 2013

Björn Norðfjörð
Affiliation:
University of Iceland
Mette Hjort
Affiliation:
Lingnan University, Hong Kong
Duncan Petrie
Affiliation:
University of York
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Summary

The anti-hero of the novel 101 Reykjavik travels around the world by browsing the World Wide Web and flipping through his satellite television channels without ever leaving downtown Reykjavik:

I watch the Pakistani news, mainly to see if they've included Iceland on their world map. The anchor is a ball of hair: hair all over Europe and Greenland. I wait for him to bend his head a little. Iceland isn't there. That's the deal with Iceland. Iceland is the kind of country that sometimes is there and sometimes isn't.

(Helgason 2002: 138)

And very much like the country itself, Icelandic cinema is the kind of national cinema that is sometimes there and sometimes is not.

In the voluminous Oxford History of World Cinema not a single Icelandic film is mentioned (Nowell-Smith 1996). Nordic National Cinemas has a very brief chapter on Icelandic cinema (Soila et al. 1998). However, call it Scandinavian instead of Nordic and you can leave Iceland out of the equation, as in The Cinema of Scandinavia(Soila 2005), but then Peter Cowie (1992) includes the country in his study of Scandinavian Cinema.In Cinema TodayEdward Buscombe ends his chapter on Western European cinema with Iceland: ‘It seems appropriate to conclude with one of Europe's smallest nations. In an age of globalization it is heartening to find that such countries accord so important a place to national cinema’ (Buscombe 2003: 333). And in this very volume Iceland is represented as one of the world's smallest national cinemas - one where the local and the global meet face to face.

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Publisher: Edinburgh University Press
Print publication year: 2007

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