T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
---|
32.1 | | GYCSC1::ORA | | Tue Jan 14 1986 11:46 | 8 |
| You're slamming us poor Finns right on the face again... incredible
discrimination... WHY SHOULD THIS NOTESFILE HAVE A
SWEDISH/DANISH/NORWEGIAN NAME !!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!
:-)
To remain neutral, how about 'FENNOSCANDIA' ?
|
32.2 | No experiience in Int'l relations | TLE::SAVAGE | | Tue Jan 14 1986 12:06 | 12 |
| Well, I'm glad I didn't just go ahead and rename it with consulting.
Sorry, I'm no diplomat :-)
FENNOSCANDIA doesn't seem to bad to me, except that it's a bit
long - liable the end up as 'FEN' in some Notebooks?
How about if the Finns just: "MODIFY ENTRY SCANDIA /NAME=FINN"
in their Notebooks, and the Scandinavians leave well enough alone?
Neil (about to wish he hadn't brought up the subject of renaming)
|
32.3 | | GYCSC1::ORA | | Wed Jan 15 1986 02:52 | 5 |
| Your last suggestion is fine with me, as long as you implement
a filter function in VAXnotes so that I don't see any Sweden-related
notes anymore after having done a /NAME=FINN ....
:-)
|
32.4 | Maybe you set the filter on your Notebook? | TLE::SAVAGE | | Wed Jan 15 1986 09:04 | 7 |
| Re: .3:
But I'm just a naive writter; maybe one of the Notes developers
will read this and offer a suggestion on how to implement the
"no Swede" filter :-)
NS
|
32.5 | Intuitively obvious? | VIA::COUGHLAN | | Thu Jan 16 1986 14:38 | 10 |
| Funny, I named this conference NORDIC in my notebook as soon as I
say the first note... in honor of the Nordic Council (at least
Norway, Sweden, Denmark, Iceland, AND FINLAND, according to my hazy
memory, and perhaps Greenland at al as well). It was intuitively
obvious to me that no conference on SCANDIA would last long without
Finland appearing... but I'm biased, as my only contact with the
area has been Finland.
Steve
|
32.6 | | GYCSC1::ORA | Ora J�rvinen GTC Munich | Fri Jan 17 1986 03:05 | 4 |
| I guess Greenland is included in a way too, being sort of
semi-independent area administered by Denmark.
|
32.7 | Anyone on the way to Thule? | TLE::SAVAGE | | Fri Jan 17 1986 15:08 | 3 |
| Yes Greenland too.
NS
|
32.8 | ? | HSKIS2::LEHTINEN | Timo Lehtinen | Sun Jan 19 1986 16:23 | 2 |
| I don't get the point. What's wrong with SCANDIA?
Isn't Finland part of Scandinavia?!?!?!?
|
32.9 | Clarification?!? | TLE::SAVAGE | | Mon Jan 20 1986 14:27 | 25 |
| Re: .8:
According to strict usage, the term Scandinavia(n) should apply
to peoples that speak a language derived from Old Norse (i.e.,
a language that has a North Germanic root). Finnish (Soumeksi)
is *not* one of those.
However...
(1) Swedish is spoken in Finland as a "second" language.
(2) Sweden and Swedish culture did (still does?) have a profound
influence on Finnish culture (see 'Profile' note).
(3) To pool resouces, the Finnish Tourist Board has joined the
Scandinavian Tourist Offices, and is represented in their
literature as tacitly being a Scandinavian country.
In short, much confusion has been created on this point. My
reading is that, to all but the purists amongst us, Finland *is*
part of Scandinavia. I will henceforth regard it as such.
Neil
|
32.10 | | GYCSC1::ORA | Ora J�rvinen GTC Munich | Tue Jan 21 1986 02:48 | 17 |
| One should distinguish between geographical, cultural and political
nomenclature.
Geographically, Finland is definitely NOT in Scandinavia (but neither are e.g.
Iceland and Greenland.)
Politically, Finland is a member of the Nordic council; the member countries
are often called 'Scandinavian countries' (which strictly speaking is not
quite correct).
Culturally, there isn't much question, though the Russian influence has
obviously been strongest in Finland.
P.S. George Schultz, in an interview before his trip to Europe a couple of
years ago said somthing like this: "I'm goint to visit five free European
countries and Finland." ~\~
|
32.11 | What SCANDIA relly is... | WHYNOT::ANKAN | Anders "ankan" �hgren | Fri Jan 24 1986 12:57 | 11 |
| Well, did you know that SCANDIA is one of the biggest insurance companies in
Sweden... thus, this notes file should discuss... insurances!
;-)
...ankan...
ps.
fun to see that Scandinavia is quite well known out there...
ds.
|
32.12 | SAS on Scandinavia | GYCSC1::ORA | Ora J�rvinen GTC Munich | Thu Jan 30 1986 11:02 | 20 |
| An excerpt from the editorial of SCANORAMA, the magazine ('your
free copy') you will find in the seatpocket in front of you on
any SAS (Scandinavian Airlines System) flight:
Scandinavia is unique.
We Scandinavians can speak our respective language and still
understand each other. All three of our countries are democracies.
We live in peace and harmony. We don't threaten our neighbours.
I don't know of any other three neighbouring countries anywhere
else in the world that can match Denmark, Norway and Sweden in
all four of these respects.
...
Well, do you see Finland included? On the other hand, SAS may
not be the ultimate authority on this subject (maybe because
the naughty Finns didn't join SAS but operate their own national
airline, Finnair ?). :-)
|
32.13 | | REX::MINOW | Martin Minow, DECtalk Engineering | Thu Jan 30 1986 11:21 | 5 |
| By objective measure (whether or not tv is subtitled), Swedes
can't understand Danish.
Martin.
|
32.14 | Swede/Dane on speaking terms? | TLE::SAVAGE | | Fri Jan 31 1986 11:50 | 14 |
| Re: .13:
I once overheard an interesting exchange between a Dane and a Swede
(the conversation was translated for me to be sure I got it right).
It was on a ferry ride between the two countries. The Swede bought
something from a vendor and said in parting [trans.] "You Danes
speak Swedish terribly." To which the Danish vendor replied,
"You Swedes speak terrible Danish!"
It was all done with a :-) but illustrates the language relationship
quite well - perhaps slightly worse than a southerner from the US
conversing with an Australian.
Neil
|
32.15 | | BLITZN::PALO | Rik @(oo)@ Palo | Sat Feb 15 1986 19:01 | 8 |
|
RE: .14
Touche'
or is that 'touche eh! ( a la McKenzie brothers in Canada ).
\rik
|
32.16 | rename that file | CYGNUS::OLSEN | | Tue Jan 13 1987 10:35 | 2 |
| Renaming the file to NORDICsounds like it would fit the bill for
all the countries up north [including island and gronland]
|
32.17 | Re: .16: | TLE::SAVAGE | Neil, @Spit Brook | Tue Jan 13 1987 16:05 | 3 |
| As per earlier replies, it would seem the best solution is for each
reader on this conference to do the renaming in their own Notebook.
That way everyone gets to use the name they like best.
|
32.18 | SWEDES VS DANES | SHARE::DYER | | Fri Feb 05 1988 13:49 | 4 |
| NO ONE IS PROBABLY READING THIS NOW BUT I AM NEW TO THE NOTES FILE
AND I DO NOT AGREE THAT THE SWEDES CAN'T UNDERSTAND DANISH BECAUSE
THE DANES CAN UNDERSTAND THE SWEDES. JUST DROP ALL THOSE "G" LIKE
THE DANES DO.
|
32.19 | More discussion of terms | CHARLT::SAVAGE | | Wed Jul 25 1990 10:47 | 33 |
| From: [email protected] (Kjartan Stefansson)
Newsgroups: soc.culture.nordic
Subject: Re: Scandinavia v. Nordic
Date: 24 Jul 90 17:22:39 GMT
Organization: Cornell Univ. CS Dept. Ithaca NY
[email protected] (James E. P. Saari) writes:
>"scandinavia" is derived from the latin "scandia", referring to the northern
>germanic language group. using this definition, this would include iceland,
>norway, sweden, and denmark, with finland getting an honorable mention
>because of its swedish speaking population.
This is new to me. I didn't know this meaning of the words
Scandia/Scandinavia. But despite this, I don't think there will be an
agreement on what Scandinavia spans. My dear friend, Webster, has the
following explanation:
(1) "the region of N.W. Europe embracing Norway, Sweden and
Denmark. Iceland is often included, on ethnic grounds, and
Finland sometimes, on geographical and historic grounds"
(2) "the peninsula formed by Norway and Sweden"
In Iceland, Scandinavia is used both in the sense of (2), or the three
countries, Norway, Sweden and Denmark.
We also have the ill-defined term of "speaking Scandinavian". That
refers to the language an Icelander speaks in Scandinavia, based on the
Danish he learns in school, adding Norwegian/Swedish/Icelandic words as
necessary, pronouncing it the best way he can, depending on the country
he is in!
Kjartan.
|
32.20 | The Icelandic word is Nordurland | CHARLT::SAVAGE | | Thu Jul 26 1990 10:37 | 23 |
| From: [email protected] (Jon Bragason)
Newsgroups: soc.culture.nordic
Subject: Re: Scandinavia v. Nordic
Date: 25 Jul 90 15:50:09 GMT
Organization: Florida International University, Miami
Reading these articles on the word Scandinavia I started thinking
about how I myself used the word. I realized that I use the word
differently here in the US than I do back home in Iceland. Here in the
US when talking about Scandinavia I am inlcuding both Iceland and
Finland. However when using the word back in Iceland I am referring to
Denmark, Norway and Sweden. It is hard to say when Finland is
included when using the word Scandinavia.
In Iceland I think we tend to use the word Nordurlond (the Nordic
Countries) more than Scandinavia because Scandinavia is not an
Icelandic word and propably because we would like to be included in the
discussion of the Nordic Countries and their culture.
Jon Arni Bragason
[email protected]
|
32.21 | No mystery | OSL09::MAURITZ | DTN(at last!)872-0238; @NWO | Mon Jul 30 1990 07:30 | 19 |
| I have always considered this a simple algorithm, if you only accept
that words have different meanings in different countries. The formula:
"Scandinavia" is the English term for our word "Norden".
No hair-splitting needed, as long as you use the right term in the
right country/language/milieu.
BTW, this is not so strange. Think of how the word "yank" is used
by
an Englishman
a Mississippian
a Bostonian
It's all in the eye of the beholder.
Mauritz
|
32.22 | FANG!? | CHARLT::SAVAGE | | Mon Jul 30 1990 10:32 | 12 |
| From: [email protected] (David L. Golber)
Newsgroups: soc.culture.nordic
Subject: Re: Scandinavia v. Nordic
Date: 27 Jul 90 15:35:52 GMT
Organization: The Aerospace Corporation, El Segundo, CA
I happened a while ago on the address list (paper) of a bunch of
anthropologist-types called "FANG", which stands for "Fennoscandia and
Norden Generally"!!!!
Back, Fang!
|
32.23 | On the origin of the word, "Scandinavia" | CHARLT::SAVAGE | | Tue Sep 25 1990 12:05 | 30 |
| From: [email protected] (Lars Henrik Mathiesen)
Newsgroups: soc.culture.nordic
Subject: Re: Scandinavia definition
Date: 20 Sep 90 15:34:17 GMT
Organization: Department Of Computer Science, University Of Copenhagen
[email protected] (Lennart Boerjeson) writes:
>Well... there are no "official" definitions, but in my opinion
>"Scandinavia" should be viewed as a *geographical* term which refers to
>the scandinavian peninsula plus Denmark. "Nordic" refers to S,N,DK plus
>Finland, Iceland, Faeroe and semi-autonomous regions, ...
While it is not relevant today, the origin of the word Scandinavia is
interesting. In the oldest source (some Roman writer, possibly Tacitus)
it scadinauia, but it is soon corrupted into scandinauia. The first
form probably represents (Very-)Old-Norse ska\din-auio (\d is eth,
``soft th''). ska\din is probably the word that evolved into Sk\{aa}ne,
the name of the southernmost county in Sweden, and auio is the word for
island.
So, Scandinavia once meant "the island of Sk\{aa}ne". At that time,
southern Sweden was probably separated from the surrounding country by
trackless forests, and to a seafaring people it might as well have been
an island. Linguistically, the original dialects of Sk\{aa}ne, Bornholm
and the Copenhagen area are closer to each other than to the rest of
Sweden _or_ Denmark.
--
Lars Mathiesen, DIKU, U of Copenhagen, Denmark [uunet!]mcsun!diku!thorinn
Institute of Datalogy -- we're scientists, not engineers. [email protected]
|
32.24 | Nordic v. Scandinavian summarized... | BSS::J_LUNDY | Too bad ignorance isn't painful | Fri Apr 16 1993 20:19 | 22 |
| So, if I were to distill the previous replies into the
following, everyone could live with it?
"Scandinavia":
- "Scandinavia" can be used as a _geographical_ term refering to
the land-mass established by Sweden, Norway, and Denmark.
- "Scandinavia" can be used in a _historical/cultural_ context to reference
peoples that speak a language derived from Old Norse (i.e., a language
that has a North Germanic root). This would include: Iceland, Greenland,
Sweden, Norway, and Denmark. Finland would not be included due to it's
stronger linguistic/cultural influence from Russia.
"Nordic":
- "Nordic" is a political/governmental term refering to the member-countries
of the Nordic Council: Sweden, Norway, Denmark, Finland, Iceland, the
Faeroe Islands and other semi-autonomous regions (Greenland).
j.
|
32.25 | Various definitions | TLE::SAVAGE | | Fri Nov 12 1993 14:51 | 97 |
| From: [email protected] (Eugene Holman)
Newsgroups: soc.culture.nordic
Subject: Re: Scandinavia
Date: 11 Nov 1993 18:29:17 GMT
Organization: University of Helsinki
Aeronavic definition:
If Scandinavia is defined as 'the countries that run SAS Airline', then
Denamrk, Norway, and Sweden are Scandinavia.
Geographical definition:
If Scandinavia is defined as the countries located on the Scandinavian
peninsula then Norway and Sweden are Scandinavia.
Heraldric definition:
If Scandinavia is defined as the countries with flags which are variations
on the Dannebrog then Iceland, the Faroes, Norway, Sweden, Denmark,
Finland, �land, Ingermanland (!), and Karelia (!!!!!!) are Scandinavia.
Iscythophagic definition:
If Scandinavia is defined as the countries where people eat pickled herring
whenever they have the opportunity then Iceland, the Faroes, Norway,
Sweden, Denmark, Finland,and �land are Scandinavia.
Sociopolitical definition:
If Scandinavia is defined as the countries where Social-Democratic-style
welfare states were etsablished and flourished up until about 1990, then
Iceland, the Faroes, Norway, Sweden, Denmark, Finland, and �land are
Scandinavia.
Restrictive linguistic definition:
If Scandinavia is defined as the countries where languages descended from
Old Norse are spoken as the majority language then Iceland, the Faroes,
Norway, Sweden, Denmark, and �land are Scandinavia.
Liberal linguistic definition:
If Scandinavia is defined as the countries where languages descended from
Old Norse are spoken by a significant segment of the indigenous population
and have official status then Iceland, Greenland, the Faroes, Norway,
Sweden, Denmark, �land and Finland are Scandinavia.
Architectural definition:
If Scandinavia is defined as the countries where functionalism plays a
major role in design and architecture then Iceland, Greenland, the Faroes,
Norway, Sweden, Denmark, �land and Finland are Scandinavia.
Mulieroliberitarian definition:
If Scandinavia is defined as the countries where women's liberation has
been more or less taken for granted at least since the end of the past-war
period then Iceland, Greenland, the Faroes, Norway, Sweden, Denmark, �land
and Finland are Scandinavia.
Numismatic definition:
If Scandinavia is defined as the countries which use crowns and ores as
their currencies then Iceland, Greenland, the Faroes, Norway, Sweden, and
Denmark are Scandinavia.
Alcohol-political definition:
If Scandinavia is defined as the countries where society tries to make you
feel guilty if you want to have a nip then Iceland, Greenland, the Faroes,
Norway, Sweden, �land and Finland are Scandinavia.
Nordic union definition:
If Scandinavia is defined as the countries where you can move from country
to country without your passport being inspected if you are fair-haired and
blue-eyed then Iceland, Greenland, the Faroes, Norway, Sweden, �land and
Finland are Scandinavia.
Imperialistic definition:
If Scandinavia is defined as the countries in northern Europe which are or
have been under the rule of a herring-eating, vodka-drinking, singing or
coughing-language speaking country, where children tend to have names
ending in -son/-sen (or -dotter) then Iceland, Greenland, the Faroes,
Norway, Sweden, Denmark, �land, Finland, Ingermanland, Karelia, Estonia, as
well as the Virgin Islands, St. Eustacia, Delaware, northern Minnesota, the
northern peninsula of Michigan, van Etten, New York; Bay Ridge, Broooklyn;
Lake Worth, Florida; Los Pacos, Spain; Kalinin, Russia; a considerable part
of Mallorca, Spain; Rhodes, Greece; as well as considerable chunks of
Namibia and Ghana are or have been Scandinavia.
I certainly consider southern Finland, where Swedish is spoken to some
degree, people eat tons of pickled herring, drink vast amounts of vodka,
often have names ending in -sson, are deconstructing a social-democratic
welfare state, gave women the vote almost a century ago, are totally blas�
about pronography, have an arrogant alcohol monopoly, salute a crossed
flag, like to read about the Swedish royal family, celebrate midsummer, eat
open-faced sandwiches with piles of prawns on them, are heavily into
functionalism, and generally mind their own business to be more Astrid
Lindgrenish than Dosteyevskian. Even the most obtuse person notices how
Scandinavian (at least southern) Finland is if he or she, after having
spent time in Helsinki, visits Stockholm, on the one hand, and Tallinn,
St. Petersburg, and Hamburg, on the other.
--
With best regards,
Eugene Holman
University of Helsinki
|
32.26 | Re: .13, 14, & .18: Danes and Swedes | TLE::SAVAGE | | Tue Jun 06 1995 10:56 | 48 |
| From: [email protected] (Jorgen Skyt)
Newsgroups: soc.culture.nordic
Subject: Re: Swedes vs. Danes???
Date: 6 Jun 1995 00:49:05 GMT
Organization: News Server at UNI-C, Danish Computing Centre for Research
and Education.
How Danes view Swedes? I (Dane) too, have yet to find out! ;-)
For one thing: it depends on your whereabouts: In Elsenor (Helsing�r)
and other places, it is obvious that there is a difference between
Danish and Swedish alcohol policy - helping to the loss of respect for
Swedish one-day tourists. But this issue is changing. The more
frequently the traffic from Sweden to Denmark is, the lesser the
differenses, to my belief. Having a laugh because of the Swedish
alcohol policy will soon stop now, as Sweden is part of the european
community (or was it "Faereinte Laendern Neuropas"!).
More and more young Swedes are seen with 'european' (shorter)
hairstyle, and lesser alcohol percentage in the blood ;-). I think the
younger generation of swedes may be more (sorry!) european than the
elder generation. But that is only little me thinking :-). Then again,
I think that the overall perception of swedish culture, from a danish
point of view, has more to do with the distance between eastern and
western denmark.
The press - of course - has a lot to do with this. And then again: The
language used in TV and radio! I myself come from the western part,
where most people understand German because of the TV, just as the
majority of eastern Danes understand Swedish because of the Swedish
TV. So When I moved to the eastern part, I was wondering why noone
understod German, as well as the natives wondered why I didn't
understand Swedish! (I remember I almost hated Swedish in school, when
we HAD to read it - "because it was a part of our common scandinavian
culture"! It wasn't to us - in southern Jutland!!)
But this important factor is slowly changing because of the
"hybrid-network" which allowes almost anyone to freely choose between
German, French, Swedish, British, Turkish - or even Norwegian
television!
But we have a lot of trouble with certain words. As when a Dane says
"this is free to take", Swedes think we are saying "congratulations!".
And when a Dane says "This is nice and cosey", the Swedes understand it
as "This is funny". But really - those are just minor problems...!
J�rgen Skyt
Denmark
|