The third part of the trilogy, Dane, offers a vibrant conclusion to the story of James Pisket, an immigrant who seeks to define his existence in a foreign and distant Europe. The core of this longed-for end of journey focuses on the protagonist's efforts to find a place in a Denmark immersed in the political complexity of the 1980s. The closing of the Danish Trilogy is an intimate portrait of that invisible, intermediate being called the migrant, in search of a desire capable of restoring his own existence: the right to citizenship.