ABSTRACT
This conclusion presents some closing thoughts on the concepts covered in the preceding chapters of this book. The book argues that digital humanities can serve the positive purpose of broadening the scope of studied actors from leading politicians, intellectuals, and authors to previously largely ignored groups of people such as journalists, who, after all, produced the lion’s share of the written text consumed by Scandinavians in the 1960s and 1970s. It shows how Nordic cooperation as such was of formative significance for the development of the feminist movement. The book discusses the crucial role of feminist scholars in the energetic and innovative popular women’s movements that conquered the state, introducing what was later to be referred to as Scandinavian state feminism. It describes how new psychological and statistical knowledge was compromised by traditional conservative Christian knowledge before it was sanctioned by the state and introduced in the curriculum of public schools.
