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Knut Hamsun's literary relationship to America.Morgridge, Barbara Gordon, January 1965 (has links)
Thesis (Ph. D.)--University of Washington. / Bibliography: l. [324]-330.
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Stumme Sprache innerer Monolog und erzählerischer Diskurs in Knut Hamsuns frühen Romanen im Kontext von Dostojewski, Schnitzler und JoycePottbeckers, Jörg January 2007 (has links)
Zugl.: Chemnitz, Techn. Univ., Diss., 2007
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Hamsun, Strindberg, Rilke the limits of the naturalistic narrative : a study of Sult, Inferno, and Die Aufzeichnungen des Malte Laurids Brigge /Denton, Frankie Belle. January 1977 (has links)
Thesis (Ph. D.)--University of Texas at Austin, 1977. / Vita. Includes bibliographical references (leaves 202-207).
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High melodrama : an English translation of Knut Hamsun's The game of life (Livets spil, 1896), with an extensive critical introductionGrabowski, Simon January 1971 (has links)
The introduction to the present study of Knut Hamsun's The Game of Life (Livets spil, 1896) sums up the strange failure of this play, a remarkable work by a famous author, to gain any measurable recognition;
a number of possible reasons are suggested, among them the membership
of Livets spil in the so-called Kareno-trilogy, the other two plays of which are rather weak. Plots of all three plays are provided.
- The introductory chapter is followed by a general survey of Hamsun’s dramatic production. Considerable space is given to a comparison between the last of his six plays, In the Grip of Life (Livet ivold, 1910) and Wedekind's Der Marquis von Keith (1900). - The remaining two long chapters
- Part Three and Four - are devoted to an exhaustive examination of Livets spil. In Part Three, the method used is that of an interpretative
investigation; the main characters and symbols/symbolic forces of the play are analyzed in depth and correlated. Special consideration is given to the character constellation Teresita-Jens Spir, as compared to the constellation Edvarda-Glahn in Hamsun's famous novel Pan (1894). Finally, the consistency of the play with the general story line of the trilogy is demonstrated. - The method followed in Part Four is that of a dramatic-aesthetic close-reading. The focus here is on general dramatic
effectiveness, and on the many special elements in the play which go into the creation of a fantastic universe on stage. Part A discusses three aspects of dramatic technique basic to the restless style of Livets
spil. Special attention is given to the principle of external intrusion,
the subtle disturbance of the dialogue from a source outside of the immediate sphere of action. Part B demonstrates the intrinsically
fantastic nature of a large number of the play's primary and secondary
elements: The basic premises from which the action derives, character
appearances and the nature and function of props, the symbolic suggestiveness of light and sound effects, and the suggestive uses and implications of spatial distance. - Finally, in the conclusion, the two basic methods of analysis followed are confronted with each other, and it is demonstrated how Hamsun realized in Livets spil some of the goals he had set himself five years earlier in his advocacy of a more psychologically oriented modern literature in Norway. / Arts, Faculty of / English, Department of / Graduate
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České překlady románu Knuta Hamsuna Hlad / Czech Translations of Knut Hamsun's Novel HungerMartínková, Věra January 2017 (has links)
The subject of this master thesis is a comparison of four Czech translations of Knut Hamsun's novel Hunger (Sult, 1890) - from 1902 (Hugo Kosterka), 1932 (Milada Lesná-Krausová), 1959 (Milada Lesná-Krausová) and 2016 (Helena Kadečková). The thesis consists of a theoretical part, dealing with the analysis of the original text and the historical context of trends in translation, and a practical part, analysing and comparing the translations. The aim of the thesis was to assess the adequacy of the translations and the correlation between the methods and the corresponding contemporaneous trends. As we expected, the language and methods applied in the translations correspond with the practices in the respective periods. In terms of the method consistency and thoroughness, the versions of Kosterka and Kadečková proved to be the most adequate.
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The Übermensch comes to Scandinavia : rereading Hamsun and Dinesen in the light of Nietzsche's philosophy /Sabo, Anne Grethe. January 2000 (has links)
Thesis (Ph. D.)--University of Washington, 2000. / Vita. Includes bibliographical references (leaves 438-457).
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Aspects du génie littéraire norvégien. Aux sources du sentiment identitaire : de Wergeland à Olav Duun / Aspects of the Norwegian literary genius. The origins of identity awareness : from Wergeland to Olav DuunSinniger, Maryline 14 December 2009 (has links)
A une période où la Norvège cherchait à affirmer son identité, les auteurs du romantisme national comme Wergeland, Bjørnson ou Ibsen ont largement puisé dans une tradition qui faisait du paysan (bonde) le représentant le plus typique de l’Histoire nationale. Ils ont toutefois instrumentalisé cet héritage culturel, tout comme les auteurs de la génération suivante, Hamsun ou Olav Duun, et l’importance qu’ils ont accordée à la nature invite à considérer celle-ci comme la « matrice » des œuvres de cette époque. Une lecture chronotopique inspirée de Bakhtine permet de mettre en évidence cette mise en scène du passé et de la nature. L’illusion d’authenticité historique cache un travail d’écriture novateur qui ouvre des perspectives vers un monde imaginaire et apporte un réconfort face à la mort. / At a time when Norway was trying to assert its identity, authors of national romanticism such as Wergeland, Bjørnson or Ibsen widely took their inspiration from a tradition which made the peasant (bonde) the most representative icon of national History. They however manipulated this cultural heritage, as have authors from the next generation such as Hamsun or Olav Duun. The predominant role these authors attributed to nature brings us to consider nature as the “matrix” for the works of that time. A chronotopic analysis inspired by Bakhtine brings into perspective this staging of the past and of nature. The illusion of historical authenticity hides a creative exercise on writing that opens to an imaginary world and brings a spiritual relief to those facing death.
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Individuation and the shaping of personal identity a comparative study of the modern novelSaugestad, Frode January 2009 (has links)
Zugl.: London, School of Oriental and African Studies, Diss.
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Nepřítel lidu - recepce severských autorů v české literatuře 50. a 60. let 20. století / An Enemy of the People: Reception of Nordic authors in Czech literature 50th and 60th years of 20th centuryKOLLOUCHOVÁ, Petra January 2014 (has links)
My master thesis is capturing the reflection Czech translations from Scandinavian literatures in fifties and sixties 20th century in Czechoslovakia. Part of the thesis is going to be research, which creates the base for bibliographycal list of books translated to Czech language from various Scandinavian languages. Thesis also focuses on period reception of these books in the form of reviews or prefaces and afterwords. Last part is going to present three chosen titles.
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Starving for their art : hunger, modernism, and aesthetics in Samuel Beckett, Paul Auster, and J.M. CoetzeeMoody, Alys January 2013 (has links)
As literary modernism was emerging in the late nineteenth and early twentieth centuries, a number of its most important figures and precursors began to talk about their own writing as a kind of starvation. My doctoral thesis considers the reasons for and development of this previously little-explored trope, arguing that hunger becomes a focal point for modernism’s complex relationship to aesthetic autonomy. I identify a specific tradition of writers, beginning in the nineteenth century with proto-modernists such as Melville and Rimbaud, flourishing in the pivotal figures of Knut Hamsun, Franz Kafka and Samuel Beckett, and expiring with modernist-influenced contemporary writers such as Paul Auster and J. M. Coetzee. Although these writers are avid readers and devoted disciples of one another, mine is the first study to read them alongside one another as a coherent literary tradition. Reading them in this way, I am able to trace the development of the ‘art of hunger’ as a locus for a crisis in aesthetic autonomy that spans the twentieth century. I develop this line of argument in two phases. In the first, I trace the emergence of an art of hunger out of modernist engagements with philosophical aesthetics and its notions of aesthetic autonomy. Readings of the “art of hunger” in Herman Melville, Arthur Rimbaud, Knut Hamsun, Franz Kafka and Samuel Beckett’s post-war work reveal that starvation carries autonomy to an extreme and hyper-literal endpoint, revealing both its desirability as an aesthetic ideal and the impossibility of art’s complete autonomy from the body, the market or the social dimensions of language. In the second phase, I consider how this trope has animated later twentieth-century engagements with modernism. For authors writing in the aftermath of modernism, hunger provides a way of considering new complications to aesthetic autonomy in the light of both their debt to modernism and their specific historical circumstances. In this light, I consider three different extensions of the modernist art of hunger: its absorption into high formalism in Beckett’s late prose; its collapse in the face of an emerging concern with the social in Paul Auster; and its transformation into an ethical aesthetics of food taboos, restriction and asceticism in J. M. Coetzee.
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