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A new view of Sweden's relations with the world beyond its borders,
from the sixteenth to the eighteenth century. Sweden's connections
to and relationships with the European and wider world is a field
of study attracting considerable scholarly attention. The essays
here, from archaeologists and historians, offer a new perspective
on early modern Sweden as deeply affected by the increasing
internationality of the 16th-18th centuries. Set in the
socio-political context of an expanding and changing kingdom, they
deal with the character and impact of a wide range of cultural
encounters - at home, in the colonies and during overseas travel.
They consider how new fashions, commodities and ideologies were
perceived and appropriated, and they discuss how these encounters
shaped the discourses of the familiar and the foreign - from
curiosity, acceptance and appreciation, to prejudice, rejection and
conflict. In taking a broad and interdisciplinary approach, and by
departing from traditional themes of political history, the volume
as a whole offers a different view of the kingdom, its people, and
its involvement with the outside world. MAGDALENA NAUM is an
Associate Professor at the Department of Archaeology and Heritage
Studies, Aarhus University, Denmark; FREDRIK EKENGREN is an
Associate Professor in Archaeology at the Department of Archaeology
and Ancient History, Lund University, Sweden. Contributors: Per
Cornell, Christina Dalhede, Lu Ann De Cunzo, Magnus Elfwendahl,
Matti Enbuske, Adam Grimshaw, Jens Heimdahl, Lisa Hellman, Kimmo
Katajala, Jonas M. Nordin, Risto Nurmi, Kenneth Nyberg, Carl-Goesta
Ojala, Joachim OEstlund, Claes B. Pettersson, Christina Rosen,
Anna-Kaisa Salmi, Goeran Tagesson, Annemari Tranberg,
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