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In 2017 she modelled again, for a new Icelandic brand. [ 8 ] Heiða became involved in environmental politics fighting plans to construct a hydro-electric plant which would involve damming the river and flooding much of her farm.
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Ástandið (Icelandic: "the condition" or "the situation") is a term used in Iceland to refer to the influence Allied troops had on Icelandic women during the Second World War. At its peak the number of Allied soldiers equaled almost 50% of the native male population.
Thousands of women across Iceland – including the prime minister – went on strike Tuesday as part of a campaign pushing for greater gender equality in the country.. It marked the seventh time ...
In Icelandic crime stories women have generally been even more clichéd and this book is very much in that spirit. [b] [1] In a later work, Katrín observed that the book was an interesting experiment and even though it had not been particularly successful it was indicative of the rapidly increasing vitality of Icelandic crime literature at the ...
The novel is often surreal or magical-realist, with many more-or-less impossible events taking place, often without explicit comment on their oddness.For example, the novel adverts to a spate of women jumping from tall buildings, but the fatal consequences of these leaps never seem to eventuate; Mount Esja is undergoing a volcanic eruption for almost the whole of the novel, ceasing at the end ...
A photo taken during the night from August 22 to 23, 2024 shows lava and smoke erupting from a volcano near Grindavik on the Icelandic peninsula of Reykjanes.
She currently lives in Hafnarfjörður, near Reykjavík, Iceland. Her Flickr images led to her creating and appearing in a Toyota advertising campaign. [2] [3] Her posted images at Flickr were copyrighted, but then sold by a third party without her consent. [4] "Only Dreemin" sold 60 prints, of seven of her photos, for more than £2,500.