Icons of Danish Modernity

Icons of Danish Modernity
Title Icons of Danish Modernity PDF eBook
Author Julie K. Allen
Publisher University of Washington Press
Pages 296
Release 2013-07-15
Genre History
ISBN 029580436X

Download Icons of Danish Modernity Book in PDF, Epub and Kindle

Julie Allen utilizes the lives and friendship of the Danish literary critic George Brandes (1842-1927) and the silent film star Asta Nielsen (1881-1972) to explore questions of culture and national identity in early twentieth-century Denmark. Danish culture and politics were influenced in this period by the country's deeply ambivalent relationship with Germany. Brandes and Nielsen, both of whom lived and worked in Germany for significant periods of time, were seen as dangerously cosmopolitan by the Danish public, even while they served as international cultural ambassadors for the very society that rejected them during their lifetimes. Allen argues that they were the prototypical representatives of a socially liberal and culturally modern "Danishness" (Danskhed) that Denmark itself only gradually (and later) grew into. This lively study brings its central characters to life while offering an original, thought provoking analysis of the origins and permutations of Danish modernism and Danish national identity--issues that continue to be significant in today's multi-ethnic Denmark. Icons of Danish Modernity is a book about the uneasy waves that arise when celebrities take on national symbolism, and the beginnings of this formula in the early twentieth century.

Icons of Danish Modernity

Icons of Danish Modernity
Title Icons of Danish Modernity PDF eBook
Author Julie K. Allen
Publisher
Pages 283
Release 2012
Genre Denmark
ISBN

Download Icons of Danish Modernity Book in PDF, Epub and Kindle

Julie Allen utilizes the lives and friendship of the Danish literary critic George Brandes (1842-1927) and the silent film star Asta Nielsen (1881-1972) to explore questions of culture and national identity in early twentieth-century Denmark. Danish culture and politics were influenced in this period by the country's deeply ambivalent relationship with Germany. Brandes and Nielsen, both of whom lived and worked in Germany for significant periods of time, were seen as dangerously cosmopolitan by the Danish public, even while they served as international cultural ambassadors for the very society that rejected them during their lifetimes. Allen argues that they were the prototypical representatives of a socially liberal and culturally modern "Danishness" (Danskhed) that Denmark itself only gradually (and later) grew into. This lively study brings its central characters to life while offering an original, thought provoking analysis of the origins and permutations of Danish modernism and Danish national identity--issues that continue to be significant in today's multi-ethnic Denmark. Icons of Danish Modernity is a book about the uneasy waves that arise when celebrities take on national symbolism, and the beginnings of this formula in the early twentieth century.Julie K. Allen is associate professor of Scandinavian studies at the University of Wisconsin, Madison."Allen weaves a compelling cultural analysis about national identity and its mores. The juxtaposition of the works of Georg Brandes and Asta Nielsen is highly original and Allen's contribution offers a much-needed introduction to an English reading audience of these important cultural figures." -Karin Sanders, University of California, Berkeley"

The Danish Avant-Garde and World War II

The Danish Avant-Garde and World War II
Title The Danish Avant-Garde and World War II PDF eBook
Author Kerry Greaves
Publisher Routledge
Pages 447
Release 2019-03-18
Genre Art
ISBN 0429885903

Download The Danish Avant-Garde and World War II Book in PDF, Epub and Kindle

This is the first book to focus on Helhesten (The Hell-Horse), an avant-garde artists’ collective active during the Nazi occupation of Denmark and one of the few tangible connections between radical European art groups from the 1920s to the 1960s. The Danes’ deliberately unskilled painterly abstraction, embrace of the tradition of dansk folkelighed (the popular) and its iterations of egalitarianism and consensus reform, called for the political relevance of art and interrogated the ideologies underlying culture itself. The group’s cultural activism presents an alternative trajectory of continuity, which challenges the customary view of World War II as a moment of artistic rupture.

A History of Danish Cinema

A History of Danish Cinema
Title A History of Danish Cinema PDF eBook
Author C. Claire Thomson
Publisher Edinburgh University Press
Pages 435
Release 2021-11-30
Genre Performing Arts
ISBN 1474461158

Download A History of Danish Cinema Book in PDF, Epub and Kindle

The first English-language book to cover Danish cinema from the 1890s to the present day.

Fascism and Modernist Literature in Norway

Fascism and Modernist Literature in Norway
Title Fascism and Modernist Literature in Norway PDF eBook
Author Dean Krouk
Publisher University of Washington Press
Pages 185
Release 2017-09-19
Genre Literary Criticism
ISBN 0295742305

Download Fascism and Modernist Literature in Norway Book in PDF, Epub and Kindle

Fascism and Modernist Literature in Norway illuminates the connections between literature and politics in interwar Europe. Focusing on the works of Nobel Prize-winning novelist Knut Hamsun and modernist poets Asmund Sveen and Rolf Jacobsen, all of whom collaborated with the Nazi regime during the occupation of Norway in World War II, and those of the anti-fascist novelist and critic Sigurd Hoel, Dean Krouk reveals key aspects of the modernist literary imagination in Norway. In their writings, Hamsun, Sveen, and Jacobsen expressed their discontent with twentieth-century European modernity, which they perceived as overly rationalized or nihilistic. Krouk explains how fascism offered these writers a seductive utopian vision that intersected with the countercultural and avant-garde aspects of their literary works, while Hoel’s critical analysis of Nazism extended to a questioning of all patriarchal forms of authority. Krouk’s readings of their works serve as a timely reminder to us all of the dangers of fascism.

Human Rights and Oppressed Peoples

Human Rights and Oppressed Peoples
Title Human Rights and Oppressed Peoples PDF eBook
Author Georg Brandes
Publisher University of Wisconsin Press
Pages 365
Release 2020-02-19
Genre Literary Collections
ISBN 0299324109

Download Human Rights and Oppressed Peoples Book in PDF, Epub and Kindle

Georg Brandes was known as the "Father of the Modern Breakthrough" for his influence on Scandinavian writers in the late nineteenth century. A prominent writer, thinker, and speaker, he often examined intellectual topics beyond the literary criticism he was best known for. In this collection, William Banks has translated a number of Brandes's pieces that engage in the concerns of oppressed peoples. By collecting, annotating, and contextualizing these works, Banks reintroduces Brandes as a major progenitor of thinking about the rights of national minorities and the colonized. Human Rights and Oppressed Peoples includes thirty-five essays and published speeches from the early twenty-first century on subjects as diverse as the Boxer Rebellion, displaced peoples from World War I, Finland's Jewish population, and imperialism. This collection will interest interdisciplinary scholars of human rights as well as those who study Scandinavian intellectual and literary history.

Meïr Aaron Goldschmidt and the Poetics of Jewish Fiction

Meïr Aaron Goldschmidt and the Poetics of Jewish Fiction
Title Meïr Aaron Goldschmidt and the Poetics of Jewish Fiction PDF eBook
Author David Gantt Gurley
Publisher Syracuse University Press
Pages 280
Release 2016-12-09
Genre Fiction
ISBN 0815653840

Download Meïr Aaron Goldschmidt and the Poetics of Jewish Fiction Book in PDF, Epub and Kindle

Meïr Aaron Goldschmidt and the Poetics of Jewish Fiction presents a bold new reading of one of Denmark’s greatest writers of the nineteenth century, situating him, first and foremost, as a Jewish artist. Offering an alternative to the nationalistic discourse so prevalent in the scholarship, Gurley examines Goldschmidt’s relationship to the Hebrew Bible and later rabbinical traditions, such as the Talmud and the Midrash. At the same time, he shows that Goldschmidt’s midrashic style in a secular context predates certain narrative movements within Modern-ism that are usually associated with the twentieth century and especially Czech writer Franz Kafka. Goldschmidt was remarkable in his era, both as a writer who explored his peripheral identity in the mainstream of European culture and as a writer of the first truly Jewish bildungsroman. In this groundbreaking study of Goldschmidt’s narrative art, Gurley refashions his position in both the Danish and Jewish literary canons and introduces his extraordinary work to a wider, non-Scandinavian audience.