Norway's Soul: Re-evaluating Knut Hamsun
Per Kristian Olsen explores the career and work of a great writer, Knut Hamsun, who beat Joyce and Woolf to Modernism but ended his life in disgrace after his support of the Nazis.
The unlikely career and Startling fall from grace of a great writer.
The Norwegian author Knut Hamsun was a self taught farm boy who beat
James Joyce and Virginia Woolf to Modernism. With his groundbreaking
novel, Hunger, published in 1890, he revolutionized world literature.
By 1922, he was awarded the Nobel Prize for literature, and was one of
the most famous writers in the world, feted by everyone from Kafka to
Hemmingway. Yet he ended his life in poverty and disgrace after his
public admiration of the Nazis. He even sent Goebbels his Nobel Prize
medal. Today he is largely unknown outside of his native country. Per
Kristian Olsen considers the best of Hamsun's writing against the
worst of his political thoughts and deeds and asks whether it is
possible to separate life from art.
Presenter: Per Kristian Olsen
Producer: Jessica Treen.
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- Thu 11 Apr 2013 11:30Βι¶ΉΤΌΕΔ Radio 4