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      Mentally stimulating work plays key role in staving off dementia, study finds

      news.movim.eu / TheGuardian · Wednesday, 17 April - 20:00


    People in routine and repetitive jobs found to have 31% greater risk of disease in later life, and 66% higher risk of mild cognitive problems

    If work is a constant flurry of mind-straining challenges, bursts of creativity and delicate negotiations to keep the troops happy, consider yourself lucky.

    Researchers have found that the more people use their brains at work, the better they seem to be protected against thinking and memory problems that come with older age.

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      Venice Biennale 2024: Nordic pavilion explores mythmaking amid ‘canon’ controversy

      news.movim.eu / TheGuardian · Wednesday, 10 April - 04:00

    The Swedish artist Lap-See Lam is drawing on the Cantonese operas of the 19th century to explore the ‘fiction’ of culture

    Amid a polarising debate taking place in Sweden over what constitutes culture, the artist behind this year’s Nordic pavilion at the Venice Biennale hopes her multilingual opera staged on a Chinese dragon ship will act as a sort of riposte.

    Lap-See Lam, a Swedish artist with Cantonese roots, is leading the Nordic countries’ offering at the international exhibition, which opens on 20 April, with a multidisciplinary artwork.

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      Reindeer skins and sonic looms: Borealis music festival dives into Sámi culture

      news.movim.eu / TheGuardian · Tuesday, 9 April - 10:34 · 1 minute

    At the Norwegian event, creators from Europe’s only Indigenous nation used kettles, synthpop and recordings of salmon to create music that drew on their often threatened traditions

    On stage in a former industrial building in the Norwegian city of Bergen sits a strange, if not bewildering, selection of objects. There is an upright, warp-weighted loom, one of the most ancient and basic forms of human technology, with a weaving in progress on its frame. There is a kettle, a heating element, and an old-fashioned hand-cranked coffee grinder. There is something that looks like a miniature upside-down table – in fact it is a warping board, the structure on which the vertical threads of a future textile are organised before being fitted to the loom. The only real hint that this is the prelude to a concert is the presence of a looper and some microphones, abrupt visitors from the 21st century.

    This is the set-up for a new work by composer Elina Waage Mikalson , artist-in-residence and co-programmer of Borealis . Well-established as an annual festival exploring the outer reaches of music and sound, this year’s event has been focused, for the first time, on experimental music made by Sámi artists – creators from Europe’s only Indigenous nation, Sápmi, which spans the modern borders of northern Norway, Sweden, Finland and Russia’s Kola peninsula. It is not just a first for the festival. The event also represents the first formal gathering of Sámi experimental musicians: a chance to consider how endangered traditional forms of cultural expression can be enriched and renewed – or, possibly, diluted and imperilled – by innovation.

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      From the Arctic Circle to the top of European theatre: director Eline Arbo on being ‘an outsider looking in’

      news.movim.eu / TheGuardian · Thursday, 4 April - 09:00

    The Norwegian theatremaker talks about succeeding Ivo van Hove as artistic director of one of the influential Internationaal Theater Amsterdam and staging classic plays as rock concerts

    When Eline Arbo informed her mother at a young age that she wanted to be a theatre director, her mother told her that it would take more than talent and hard work to become a truly great artist – you had to be respectful and caring, too. She remembers her mother telling her that “a lot of great artists are terrible people, and a lot of lovely people are mediocre artists. The hardest thing is to combine the two.”

    Today the 38-year-old Norwegian is still striving to meet the high bar set by her mother at no less exposed a workplace than one of the best-known theatres in Europe. Having made a name for herself in her native country and the Netherlands with productions that wedded style and playfulness, Arbo has been the artistic director of Internationaal Theater Amsterdam (ITA) since last September.

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      Manchester City scare as Erling Haaland limps out of training for Norway

      news.movim.eu / TheGuardian · Tuesday, 19 March - 18:14


    • Striker filmed holding his leg after an apparent knock
    • City host fellow title rivals Arsenal in 12 days’ time

    Erling Haaland has limped out of training while on international duty with Norway.

    The Manchester City forward was filmed coming off the training pitch with an apparent knock only 12 days before the champions host title rivals Arsenal.

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      From ocean to plate: the female-led seaweed company – from the agencies

      news.movim.eu / TheGuardian · Tuesday, 19 March - 07:00


    Lofoten Seaweed in Norway creates products for everyone from home cooks to professional chefs. Seaweed including nori, grass kelp, knotted wrack, truffle seaweed, among many other local species, are used in different sectors of the food industry to replace condiments, or provide alternative flavours

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      Climate activists across Europe block access to North Sea oil infrastructure

      news.movim.eu / TheGuardian · Saturday, 16 March - 15:43

    Blockades at facilities in Germany, the Netherlands, Norway and Sweden, with protests in Scotland and action expected in Denmark

    Climate activists in four countries are blocking access to North Sea oil infrastructure as part of a coordinated pan-European civil disobedience protest.

    Blockades have been taking place at oil and gas terminals, refineries and ports in Germany, the Netherlands, Norway and Sweden, in protest at the continued exploitation of North Sea fossil fuel deposits.

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      How did Norway become the electric car superpower? Oil money, civil disobedience – and Morten from a-ha

      news.movim.eu / TheGuardian · Tuesday, 12 March - 14:41

    More than 90% of new cars sold in Norway are electric. And it all started with some pop stars driving around in a jerry-rigged Fiat Panda

    I’m kneeling on the snow outside the king’s house, impersonating a 1980s heart-throb, with a man named Harald and an electric car. It’s a situation that probably needs some explanation.

    Harald isn’t the king, although the king of Norway is also called Harald ; we just happen to be outside the monarch’s residence, a handsome red manor. I’m in Stavanger to find out how, in a world where transport contributes about 20% of CO 2 emissions , Norway came to lead the world in electric car take-up. In 2023, 82.4% of private vehicles sold in the country were electric. In January, the figure was 92.1% . The goal is to hit 100% by next year.

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      No big North Sea fossil fuel country has plan to stop drilling in time for 1.5C goal

      news.movim.eu / TheGuardian · Tuesday, 12 March - 09:00

    UK, Germany, Netherlands, Norway and Denmark have failed to align oil and gas policies with Paris pledges, say campaigners

    None of the big oil and gas producers surrounding the North Sea plan to stop drilling soon enough to meet the 1.5C (2.7F) global heating target, a report has found.

    The five countries – the UK, Germany, the Netherlands, Norway and Denmark – have failed to align their oil and gas policies with their climate promises under the Paris agreement, according to the campaign group Oil Change International.

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