Ringsakboka : village book for Brøttum - Ringsaker - Veldre

Ringsakboka : village book for Brøttum - Ringsaker - Veldre
  Do a quick search for this at:
  Search tips
Oria The National Library of Norway
Library searchAntikvariat.netHistory of the Danes Online
Subtitle
Large municipality : Ringsaker
Volume
6
Author(s)
Ola Alsvik
Year
2006
Publisher
Brøttum historielag Ringsaker historielag Veldre historielag
ISBN
8299589517, 9788299589512, 8299175623
Pages
412
Part of the work
Ringsakboka
Source
BIBSYS

The book covers the period from 1964 to 2006. Jan Haug has produced around 690 illustrations for this volume.

Contents

Chapter 1

 

- to be a Ring Saxon and a Hedmarking at the same time

 
Ring case identity     3
The three dimensions of identity: "to be" - "to do" - "to have"     6
The large municipality as a government project   11
Parliament as a maternity ward   13
What should the child be called? The connection between names, identity and society       16
Baptism day   21
The identity of the new global citizen   21
Hedmarkingen - from "the blue-eyed race" to Arthur Buchardt   22
The way of life in Hedmarken   25
Ringsaker Blad - a standard bearer for Ringsaker identity   26
Two kinds of Hedmarkings - and a Gudbrandsdøl   28
The difficult language: Dialect and identity   30
Dialect - the Ringsak dialect   31
The village and the city - a complex relationship   32
Rural originality meets modern marketing Lucky Næroset and Hans Christian Medlien       34
The dark companion of identity: The dangerous distinction between "scoop" and "judgment"   37
  
  

Chapter 2

 

The political development of the large municipality - "We in Ringsaker have had our internal feuds over the years"

 
The city center debate - Moelv versus Brumunddal   41
"The North-South conflict"    45
Old Ringsaker versus Furnes    48
The municipality's first election - a "bloodbath"?    51
Gathering the administrative apparatus    54
The forces of integration - what were they?    55
Mentality and identity, labor market and marriage market    57
Economic growth    57
Municipal expansion on the terms of the settlement pattern    59
The personal touch - Peder Esbjørnsen and Bjarne Mork    59
The labor movement - a political force and the glue of local communities    62
The undercurrents of local politics    64
The culture of the Labor Party: Dictatorship of the Council?    65
Turbulent years    69
The workers' movement in Ringsaker: A culture on the brink of extinction?    70
"The best adult education Ringsaker Arbeiderparti could get"    72
New governance structure - and new line of collaboration    73
Urban areas develop - the municipality changes   77
Municipal organization in the 1980s: A less control-oriented state?     88
Ringsaker municipality's administration before 2003: The budget model    88
2003: From agency model to flat structure    88
Political responsibility: From main committees to neutral committees     89
New forces - regionalization and Mjøsby    90
From large municipality to regional municipality?    92
  
  

Chapter 3 

 

Agriculture - development and restructuring 

 
Between two ham shifts?    97
The consequences of channeling policy: From routine to choice  101
The long road from versatility to specialization  103
The driving forces  105
Kubygda Ringsaker - a Hedmark perspective  109
Lactating cows: "Largest in Norway"  109
Ringsaker's technological edge - the farm tanks  113
The 1970s: The threat of political control  115
The planned agriculture two decades between growth and protection  117
Ringsaker in the era of planned agriculture  117
Sows - way of life and lifestyle  120
The pig - from common property to specialist production   122
Slaughter pigs: "Largest in the country"  123
Poultry - free-range or factory-farmed?  124
Chicken production: Ringsaker second largest  125
From cattle to chicken  125
The flip side of livestock farming - environmental hazards and lake action  126
New and old specializations: Vegetables, fruit and berries  132
Norway's largest strawberry municipality  132
Plantforsk Kise - part of the research front  134
Agriculture and industry: Case OK  138
Masculine and feminine workplaces  139
The 1980s: From politics and governance to market and freedom 141
Strand Brænderi: An adaptable industrial company  142
Agriculture in Ringsaker under market liberalism  143
Garden tourism  144
Forestry and outdoor industries  147
Bygdeallmenningene and Philske condominium  148
     Tensions and collaboration  148
     Ringsaker almenning - resource management, trade and industry 149
A new farmer role is emerging  152
The agriculture-based industry  155
Globalization and the agro-industrial complex  161
Conclusion: Lines, breaks and continuity 162
  
  

Chapter 4

 

The prefabricated house and the industrial adventure in Moelv and Brumunddal 

 
Norway's largest rings exhibition  165
A Gudbrandsdøl comes to the village: Johs Mageli and Moelven Brug 166
Visions and social change in the post-war years  168
The assembly line house - the industrial society's dream home?  171
Helge Seip - a political benefactor for modern Ringsaker?  173
Moelven House for salaried employees   
  - a niche product in the 1950s 
  - an industrial success in the 1960s and 70s 174
Ringsaker and the Norwegian construction market - a community of destiny 178
Berger Langmoen's way into the construction industry 179
Companies, districts, municipalities - a fragile food chain 182
People's housing dreams: From small houses to Tyrolean castles 182
Ringsaker in yelp time! 184
Policy and industry growth 187
     "Last in, first out" 187
Moelven Brug and Berger Langmoen - two companies, one destiny 188
Swan song for the prefab era  189
Frode Alhaug and Johs. Mageli - leaders in times of change  191
The one crisis and the many  193
The Gaupen-Henger phenomenon  194
     Reidar Frydenlund - an entrepreneur from Gaupen 195
Summary: Ringsaker and the prefabricated house - a very nervous romance  196
  
  

Chapter 5 

 

The school - the glue of the local community? 

 201
A tradition of school skepticism?  202
The new unitary school - Ringsaker, Nes and Furnes as a trial area  202
Centralization - a school policy credo in the 50s and 60s 204
The large municipality and the centralization decision  206
The centralization decision and resistance to the nine-year school  207
Ringsaker - a laggard?  208
 "...much has been neglected, and there is a lot to tackle..." 209
 Lismarka - the centralization decision is put to the test 210
De lokalhistoriske verk - Ringsaker's many small books about the neighborhood school and the neighborhood environment  211
The decentralization line prevails  211
School construction  212
School policy and population development  214
Ringsak School in the 70s - integration and functional growth 216
The school in a time of change  217
The right-wing wave in schools - an ambiguous benefit for Ringsaker's decentralists  219
The renaissance of centralization? 224
Adult education center  225
Trial with German in primary school in Ringsaker  227
Private schools in Ringsaker - Steiner school and Montessori school 228
     Furu Steiner School 229
     Nordheim: Ringsaker Montessori School 229
  
  

Chapter 6 

 

The welfare municipality Ringsaker - between welfare state, welfare municipality and welfare society 

 
Background quilt  233
The development of the welfare municipality Ringsaker  234
From poor relief to welfare - some institutional examples 236
Ringsaker - from three poor municipalities to  én welfare municipality 238
Elderly care - political change and institutional growth 240
New division of roles between private and public actors  242
"Liberation" of the municipalities?  244
Buttekverntunet: Interaction between private and public actors  245
Childcare in Ringsaker - a pattern with many variations 248
The discovery of youth in Ringsaker - social problem and cultural factor  249
The professions and the development of welfare services  249
A new look at one of social policy's core groups - the mentally disabled  250
Activity and training - AO centers in Ringsaker 252
New care groups - refugees  253
Substance abusers - from private philanthropy to public clientele 254
The 1980s: A tougher society - the concept of welfare under pressure  256
Privatization of health  257
Conclusion - welfare state or welfare municipality? 259
  
  

Chapter 7

 

Between fantasy and reality - some main lines in the history of municipal communication 

 
The modern Mjøsbrutanken - an investigation into a case of danger  261
First candidate for fatherhood: A nose ring  262
Second candidate: Gjøvikensens and the Gjøvik myth  264
Third candidate: The Moelv Myth  265
The redeemers of Brutank: Motoring and the road system  266
"Leon has such a hot stuff..."  268
The long, long wait  269
A/S Mjøsferga - the crude tank's effective rival 269
The car - from leisure good to environmental problem  273
A paralyzed municipality?  274
Construction of new Europaveg through Ringsaker  275
The search for a third alternative - Kluftmoen and Tandeskogen 276
Councillor Mork gets éA bright idea: Rudshøgda!  278
Mjø municipalities from cooperation to conflict 279
Rudshøgda will be realized  280
Success or failure?  284
Mjøsbrua and Rudshøgda - between pessimism and optimism  288
  
  

Chapter 8 

 

Cultural life in the municipality 

 
Cultural life - a changing concept  291
The church - from threat society to municipal cultural servant?  293
Ringsaker municipality as a culture builder  294
Music schools  295
The music school is realized  298
Ringsaker Opera - between fine culture and popular culture  301
Through troughs - Opera is professionalizing 302
With ambitions to go far  304
An immigrant from Telemark - with roots in Brumunddal  306
Theater environment in development  307
The visual arts - galleries and practicing artists 311
The renaissance of history societies 316
"All hands on deck"  317
Skiing and orienteering  320
Sports clubs - from broad focus to specialization  322
Football - local patriotism and varying ambitions  324
Curlig - a new sport  325
New and old sports  325
"We are the center of the Olympics"  326
Ringsaker's most winning Olympian  329
The legacy of Alf Prøysen 329
Heirlooms and new expressions: Prøysenhuset  330
Prøysenstua  331
Stock exchange and cathedral?  333
Being compared to Prøysen - being an author in Ringsaker  335
Prøysenhuset: Ringsaker's largest window to the whole of Norway  336
"A foreign element in the village"  337
"I don't want to be part of the big wheel" - Guttorm P. Haugen  338
Ove Røsbak - now our journey is over  339
The Ringsaker Prize  343
"When the whole hometown cried"  344
     The new Veldrekirka: "A vessel to God" 344
  
  

Chapter 9 

 

With Brumunddal on wild, new and better roads 

 
Ringsaker in the nation's memory  347
The events - seen from two points of view  348
The masters of the Mobiltomta  349
"We are race conscious"  351
Measures against racism  353
"Brumunddal - the place God forgot?" 358
Brumunddal on new roads - Brumunddal on wild roads  359
Brumunddal turned its back on Myrdal  364
From wild to new and better roads  365
Grasrota gets involved - Mørkved-OL and Mathare United  367
In search of explanations  369
  
  

Chapter 10 

 

"The wheel of change" 

 
A way of life before the end  373
Ringsak identity - between region and community  375
Assembly hall in northern Ringsaker  378
Ringsaker municipality as a bearer and creator of belonging  379
Back to the roots - agriculture and resource-based industry: the deep structure of belonging?  381
Register  386
Source references  399
Bibliography  410