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1996 | 3 | 121-130

Article title

Laxness’s wives tell their stories

Authors

Content

Title variants

Languages of publication

EN

Abstracts

EN
No twentieth-century Icelandic author has enjoyed success and popularity to rival that of Halldor Laxness. At the end of his writing career, Laxness wrote four books which he called “novels in essay form” or essais-romans, but which are generally considered to be memoirs, written with artistic licence. These books are: 7 tuninu heima (In the Field at Home) (1975), tJngur eg var (Young was I) (1976), Sjomeistarasagan (The Story of Seven Masters) (1978), and Grikklandsarid (The Year of Greece) (1980). They cover only a fraction of the author’s life, up to the age of twenty. Readers have learned of his subsequent experiences mostly through countless articles and interviews in the press, on radio and television. Laxness has, at least since winning the Nobel Prize for Literature in 1955, been a public personality, although he has been reticent about his private life.

Year

Volume

3

Pages

121-130

Physical description

Dates

published
2007-12-01

Contributors

References

  • Edda Andresdottir. Á Gljùfrasteini: Edda Andrésdóttir ræðir við Auði Sveinsdóttur Laxness. Reykjavik: Vaka, 1984.
  • Friedman, Susan Stanford. “Women’s Autobiographical Selves: Theory and Practice”. The Private Self: Theory and Practice of Women’s Autobiographical Writings. Ed. Shari Benstock. London: Routledge, 1988. Pp. 34-62.
  • Gusdorf, Georges. “Conditions and Limits of Autobiography”. Autobiography: Essays Theoretical and Critical. Ed. James Olney. Princeton: Princeton U.P., 1980. Pp. 28-48.
  • Hannes Pétursson. Bokmenntir. Alfræeði Menningarsjóðs. Reykjavik: Menningarsjðóur, þjóðvinafelagið, 1972.
  • Helga Kress. Rev. of A Gljufrasteini by Edda Andresdottur and Vid Porbergur by Gylfi Grondal. Saga 23 (1985), 305-318.
  • Helgi Skúli Kjartansson. “Sagan beint i æð: Hugleiðingar um minningarbsekur”. Ný saga 1(1987), 79-83.
  • Jakob Benediktsson, ed. Hugtök og heiti i bókmenntafræði. Reykjavik: Bókmenntafræùistofnun Háskola Íslands, Mál og menning, 1983.
  • Lejeune, Philippe. On Autobiography. Ed. Paul John Eakin. Trans. Katherine Leary. Theory and History of Literature 52. Minneapolis: U. of Minnesota P., 1989.
  • Mandel, Barrett J., “Full of Life Now”. Autobiography: Essays Theoretical and Critical. Ed. James Olney. Princeton: Princeton U.P., 1980. Pp. 49-72.
  • Peterson, Linda H., “Institutionalizing Women’s Autobiography: Nineteenth-Century Editors and the Shaping of an Autobiographical Tradition”. The Culture of Autobiography: Constructions of Self-Representation. Ed. Robert Folkenflik. Stanford: Stanford U.P., 1993. Pp. 80-103.
  • Silja Aðalsteinsdóttir. Í aðalhlutverki Inga Laxness: Endurminningar Ingibjargar Einars dóttur. Reykjavik: Mai og menning, 1987.
  • Smith, Sidonie. A Poetics of Women’s Autobiography: Marginality and the Fictions of Self-Representation. Bloomington and Indianapolis: Indiana U.P., 1987.

Document Type

Publication order reference

Identifiers

YADDA identifier

bwmeta1.element.ojs-issn-2299-6885-year-1996-volume-3-article-10938
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