About the Journal Scandinavian-Canadian Studies is a journal published by the AASSC (Association for the Advancement of Scandinavian Studies in Canada). It expresses in concrete—and more recently virtual—form the Association’s conviction that there is much to be learned from peoples of Scandinavia, not least by Canadians, who share a comparable geopolitical situation, not to mention social and cultural values. Articles deal with a wide range of subjects: translation studies, mermaids, multiculturalism, the films of Bergman, Ibsen and other writers, Scandinavian immigration to Canada, Icelandic sagas, and so on. The first volume was published in 1983.
Vol. 13 (2001): SCANDINAVIAN-CANADIAN STUDIES/ÉTUDES SCANDINAVES AU CANADA Vol. 13 (2001)

Noel D. Broadbent. Northern Pasts, Northern Futures An Archaeological Project on Cultural Interactionism and Climate Change in Northern Sweden, 9000 B.C. to A.D. 1800, page 6
Andrei V. Golovnev. Peoples and Borders of the Russian North Ethnicity in a Political Environment, page 22
Lassi Heininen. Finland as a Nordic Country, and as a European State, page 36
Marianne Lykke Thomsen. Challenges of Economic Development in Greenland Involving Strategies of International Co-operation, page 50
Daisy Neijmann. "Beyond Icelandic" Teaching in a Heritage Language and Literature Department, page 62
Christopher English. Njal in Vinland Contextualizing Canadian Law, page 74
Reviews / Comptes Rendus
Angela Carr. Review of Baltic Light: Early Open-Air Painting in Denmark and Northern Germany by Catherine Johnston, Helmut Börsch-Supan, Helmut R. Leppien, and Kaspar Monrad, page 81
Seija Paddon. Review of Beyond Ambivalence: Postmodernity and the Ethics of Translation by Kaisa Koskinen, page 91
John Lingard. Review of Ibsens samtidsskuespill: En studie i glasskapets dramaturgi by Asbjørn Aarseth, page 93