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Thesis Eleven, Vol. 77, No. 1, 5-23 (2004)
DOI: 10.1177/0725513604042657
© 2004 Thesis Eleven Pty, Ltd., SAGE Publications

Nordic Modernity: Origins, Trajectories and Prospects

Bo Stråth

Contemporary History at the European University Institute in Florence and History at Gothenburg University http://www.iue.it/Personal/Strath/Welcome.html

Nordic modernity is often understood in terms of enlightened and progressive welfare politics and social equality. There is a more or less implicit connotation to images of a social democratic model. The aim of this article is twofold: to discuss the historical preconditions and construction of that model of progressive politics, and to discuss its relevance today and its future prospects. Concerning the first aim, the argument is that there is nothing historically predetermined of a progressive development path. Nordic modernity should not be understood as teleology or as given by a natural state of egalitarian peasant communities. Historically, all the Nordic societies except Iceland were under authoritarian or absolute rule. However, there were factors underpinning a more progressive and egalitarian development in the North, in particular the strength of the peasant freeholders and of the urban middle classes. The argument in this article is that these forces finally broke through in the 1930s as a response to the Great Depression. Everywhere in Norden redgreen Social Democratic-Farmers’ Party reform coalitions emerged in attempts to cope with the economic crisis, and extreme political alternatives were marginalized. The Social Democrats were, with the exception of Iceland, the larger party in the coalitions. In that sense there is a Scandinavian Sonderweg .

Key Words: education • folk • popular movements • religion • the peasant figure


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