
| Title: | Knut Hamsun - The Dark Side of Literary Brilliance |
| Author: | Monika Zagar - associate professor of Scandinavian studies at the University of Minnesota. |
| Description: | In her incisive study of Knut Hamsun, Monika Zagar refuses to separate his political and cultural ideas from an analysis of his highly regarded writing. Her analysis reveals the ways in which messages of racism and sexism appear in plays, fiction, and none-too-subtle nonfiction produced by a prolific author over the course of his long career. In the process, Zagar illuminates Norway's changing social relations and long history of interaction with other peoples. Focusing on selected masterpieces as well as writings hitherto largely ignored, Zagar demonstrates that Hamsun did not arrive at his notions of race and gender late in life. Rather, his ideas were rooted in a mindset that idealized Norwegian rural life, embraced racial hierarchy, and tightly defined the acceptable notion of women in society. Making the case that Hamsun's support of Nazi political ideals was a natural outgrowth of his reactionary aversion to modernity, Knut Hamsun serves as a corrective to scholarship treating Hamsun's Nazi ties as unpleasant but peripheral details in a life of literary achievement.
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| Published: | October 2009 |
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ISBN-10: 0295989459 |
| Reviews: |
"Knut Hamsun is a very important contribution not only to the study of Knut Hamsun's oeuvre but also to the general study of literature. By asking the question of how Hamsun's works have been affected by his political and social attitudes, Zagar offers an instructive example of how crucial it is not to separate literary works from the context that enabled them." - Jan Sjavik, University of Washington |