Okategoriserade Oscar Nygren (142) Östersjöfrågan – En idégeografisk studie av svenskt utrikespolitiskt tänkande 1914–1945

 Abstract [en] This thesis argues that the Baltic Sea region was shaped intellectually, politically and geographically during the period 1914–1945. […]

Published on balticworlds.com on December 16, 2025

article as pdf Comments Off on Oscar Nygren (142) Share
  • Facebook
  • del.icio.us
  • Pusha
  • TwitThis
  • Google
  • LinkedIn
  • Digg
  • Maila artikeln!
  • Skriv ut artikeln!

 Abstract [en]

This thesis argues that the Baltic Sea region was shaped intellectually, politically and geographically during the period 1914–1945. From a Swedish perspective, this process of imaginative formation did not occur throughconsensus; rather, it transpired through continuous debate and discussionamong a multitude of different actors. In this particular context, a variety ofbilateral, regional, and universal arguments pertaining to diverse ideologiesexerted influence on Swedish foreign policy and this “region work in themargins”.

Previous research on Swedish foreign policy has tended to focus on analyses of official policies as well as on high level diplomatic and international relations. Less attention has been paid to understanding hownspatial ideas about the region and the world contributed to Swedish international political thought. The thesis aims to contribute with a deeper and more nuanced understanding of how foreign policy is discussed andshaped. This thesis proffers a novel perspective on the history of Swedishinternational political thought by means of an analysis of statements from awide range of Swedish actors representing the entire political spectrum inwhat is referred to as “extended foreign policy”.

It is evident that the Swedish understanding of world politics was constrained by a national interpretative framework. This does not imply that Sweden lacked the capacity to adopt alternative perspectives; the geopolitical strategies available for understanding the fluctuations of world politics were determined by historical factors, concrete experiences, and foreignpolicy visions that were prevalent in Sweden at the time. The conclusiondrawn from this research is that, in the context of Swedish internationalpolitical thought, which attributes an important role to Sweden in globalissues, the history of the Baltic Sea region is significant, insofar as it hasserved as a site for projections and visions. This is not only in relation to outdated dreams of regaining great power status, as often claimed in previous research, but also in relation to Swedish attempts at “sublimating” such expansionist ambitions into commercial, cultural, economic and technical norm entrepreneurship, in the Baltic Sea region and beyond.

Subject: History
Public defence of thesis: 24 October 2025

https://www.diva-portal.org/smash/get/diva2:2001852/FULLTEXT01.pdf

 

  • by Florence Fröhlig

    An Associate Professor in Ethnology at the School of Contemporary and Historical Studies and Director of studies of the Baltic and East European Graduate School (BEEGS) at Södertörn University, Sweden. Besides her research interests concerning memory and mourning processes, counter-memories, resilience and the transmission of memory (PhD "Painful legacy of World War II: Nazi forced enlistment: Alsatian/Mosellan Prisoners of War and the Soviet Prison Camp of Tambov” 2013), she is interested in the memorialization’s and heritagization’s processes of industrial sites. Her research has also expanded to ecological issues in the Baltic and Eastern European regions. Currently, she is involved in a research project on Russian and Belarusian migrants and their identity construction in Lithuania and Poland following Russia’s invasion of Ukraine.

  • all contributors