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You are here : AllRefer.com > Reference > Encyclopedia > Scandinavian Literature, Biographies > BjOrnstjerne BjOrnson
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BjOrnstjerne BjOrnson, Scandinavian Literature, Biographies

Related Category: Scandinavian Literature, Biographies

BjOrnstjerne BjOrnson[byOrn´styernu byOrn´sOn] Pronunciation Key, 1832–1910, Norwegian writer and political leader, one of the major figures of Norwegian literature. He was an influential journalist, who sought to revive Norwegian as a literary language and championed the rights of the oppressed. His celebrated SynnOve Solbakken (1857; first tr. 1881; Sunny Hill, 1932) was one of the first Norwegian novels. BjOrnson succeeded his friend Ibsen as director of the Ole Bull Theater in Bergen (1857–59) and then became involved in politics, fighting against Norwegian amalgamation with Sweden and championing parliamentary democracy. BjOrnson became national poet of Norway : one of his poems became the national anthem : and reached his pinnacle as a lyric poet while abroad in Europe (1860–63). He returned to Oslo in 1863 and directed the Oslo Theater until 1867; his literary output over the next decade was prodigious. After enduring a religious crisis (1878–79) BjOrnson accepted Darwinian evolution in a religious context, rejecting traditional religion. From this time his writings urged the liberation of the human spirit from dogma and prejudice. See, for example, the story Dust (1882, tr. 1884), the play A Gauntlet (1883, tr. 1890), and the drama Beyond Our Power (2 parts, 1883–95; tr. of 1st part, Pastor Sang, 1893; tr. of 2d part, Beyond Human Might, 1914). BjOrnson received the 1903 Nobel Prize in Literature.

See biography by H. Larson (1944).



The Columbia Electronic Encyclopedia Copyright © 2009, Columbia University Press.
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Topics that might be of interest to you:

Norwegian literature

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Literature and the Arts > Literature in Other Modern Languages
Literature and the Arts > Biographies
People > Literature and the Arts


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