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The Xenophobe's Guide to the Danes

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The Xenophobe's Guide to the Danes

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Description

Everything in moderation. Denmark is a land of modesty and moderation. This is largely a consequence of the Danes' sense of social responsibility. The touchstone of any activity or point of view is whether it is samfundsrelevant, that is, socially useful. That's not funny. Danish humor suffers from the handicap of the Danes' literal-mindedness ("Can you play the violin?" "I don't know, I've never tried."), and for their need to conform. In a country where all right-thinking people think the right things, no-one is sufficiently different to laugh at. Combined forces. Danes cooperate. Lego comes from the Danish words leg godt, which means "play well," and this is just what the Danes are good at. They get along well with other people. In any brochure translated for the world market, the word cooperation will appear at least three times per page along with a generous sprinkling of "joint ventures." Frankly speaking. They say what they think about sex, politics, religion, everything. Small talk can assume monstrous proportions. They will tell you frankly how much their mortgage is, how much they earn per hour, and whether or not they shave their armpits.

Author Biography:

Helen Dyrbye (nee Pearce) grew up on the east coast of England and learnt to sail on the Norfolk Broads. A career as PR assistant for the Scout Association was interrupted by marriage to a Dane and relocation to Denmark. After two years of glottal stopping and starting, she began running courses for business professionals. A published author of children's fiction, she also works as a language consultant and makes dreadful packed lunches. She and her husband dream of finding a tax loophole big enough to buy a boat and teach their two sons to sail. Steven Harris was working for a multinational in Brussels when he was moved to Copenhagen for 12 months' 'rotational' training. He went on rotating in Denmark for ten years.He knew he had mastered Danish when people stopped telling him how well he spoke it. He now lives in England with his Danish wife and three children, and works from home as an intellectual odd-job man - translating Danish into English and doing market consultancy kinds of things in the legal and publishing worlds. Thomas Golzen was born and brought up in London. He went to Denmark to work as a professional musician for three months in 1987, and never left.After much travelling and a bewildering array of emergency jobs he settled in Copenhagen, where he still lives with his Danish partner and their two children. A graduate from the National Danish Film School, he is a freelance screenwriter. He also enjoys earning an extra bob or two by twanging his guitar, and helping to run emergency shelters for the Danish Red Cross.
Release date NZ
October 9th, 2008
Audience
  • General (US: Trade)
Illustrations
Illustrations, maps
Pages
96
Dimensions
110x178x10
ISBN-13
9781906042271
Product ID
2715108

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