Harry Martinson
Harry Martinson Born May 6, 1904(1904-05-06)Jämshög, SwedenDied February 11, 1978(aged 73)
Stockholm, SwedenNotable award(s) Nobel Prize in Literature
1974 Shared with Eyvind Johnson
Spouse(s) Moa Martinson
Harry Martinson (May 6, 1904—February 11, 1978) was an author and poet. In 1949 he was elected into the Swedish Academy. He was awarded a joint Nobel Prize in Literature in 1974 together with fellow Swede Eyvind Johnson. The choice for Eyvind Johnson and Harry Martinson was very controversial as both were on the Nobel panel. They and Graham Greene, Saul Bellow and Vladimir Nabokov were the favored candidates that year.
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Life
Martinson was born in Jämshög, in the Swedish county of Blekinge in south-eastern Sweden. At a young age he lost both his parents, whereafter he was stationed on the Swedish country side as a foster child (Kommunalbarn). At the age of sixteen, Martinson ran away, and enrolled on a ship where he spent the next years sailing around the world, visiting countries such as Brazil and India.
A few years later, lung problems forced him to set ashore in Sweden. The next years were spent travelling around Sweden without a steady employment, at times living as a vagabond on country roads. In the city of Malmö, he was arrested for vagrancy, at the age of 21.
In 1929, he debuted as a poet. Together with Artur Lundkvist, Gustav Sandgren, Erik Asklund and Josef Kjellgren, he authored the anthology Fem unga (Five Youths), which introduced Swedish Modernism. His poetry combined an acute eye for and love of nature with a deeply felt humanism. His popular success as a novelist came with the semi-autobiographical Nässlorna blomma (Flowering Nettle), in 1935, about hardships encountered by a young boy on the countryside. It has since been translated into more than 30 languages.
One of his most famous works is the poetic cycle Aniara, which is a story of the space craft Aniara, that during a journey through space loses its course, and subsequently aimlessly floats through space, without destination. The book was published in (1956), and became in 1959 an opera, composed by Karl-Birger Blomdahl. The cycle has been described as an epic story of man's fragility and folly.
From 1929 to 1940 he was married to the Swedish writer Moa Martinson. The sensitive Harry found criticism in the 1970s subsequent to the Nobel prize hard to cope with. He committed suicide with a pair of scissors in Karolinska Hospital in Stockholm in 1978.
The 100th anniversary of his birth was celebrated around Sweden in 2004.
Bibliography
Titles in English where known.
Novels
- Vägen till Klockrike (The Road)
- Nässlorna blomma (Flowering Nettles)
- Vägen ut (The Way Out)
Essays
- Svärmare och harkrank
- Midsommardalen (Midsommer valley)
- Det enkla och det svåra (The easy and the hard)
- Utsikt från en grästuva (Sight from a tussock)
- Verklighet till döds (Reality to death)
- Den förlorade jaguaren (The Lost Jaguar)
- Resor utan mål (Aimless Journeys)
Poems
- Spökskepp
- Nomad
- Passad (Trade Wind)
- Cikada
- Aniara
- Gräsen i Thule
- Vagnen
- Dikter om ljus och mörker
- Tuvor
Radio plays
- Gringo
- Salvation
- Lotsen från Moluckas
Stage plays
- Tre knivar från Wei
Psalms
- De blomster som i marken bor
External links
- Harry Martinson
- A translators look at Flowering Nettles Swedish book review
- Harry Martinson's Photo & Gravesite
Elin WägnerSwedish Academy,
Seat No.15
1949-1978 Succeeded by
Kerstin Ekman
Pär Lagerkvist (1951) · François Mauriac (1952) · Winston Churchill (1953) · Ernest Hemingway (1954) · Halldór Laxness (1955) · Juan Ramón Jiménez (1956) · Albert Camus (1957) · Boris Pasternak (1958) · Salvatore Quasimodo (1959) · Saint-John Perse (1960) · Ivo Andrić (1961) · John Steinbeck (1962) · Giorgos Seferis (1963) · Jean-Paul Sartre (1964) · Michail Sholokhov (1965) · Shmuel Yosef Agnon / Nelly Sachs (1966) · Miguel Ángel Asturias (1967) · Yasunari Kawabata (1968) · Samuel Beckett (1969) · Aleksandr Solzhenitsyn (1970) · Pablo Neruda (1971) · Heinrich Böll (1972) · Patrick White (1973) · Eyvind Johnson / Harry Martinson (1974) · Eugenio Montale (1975)
Complete roster · 1901–1925 · 1926–1950 · 1951–1975 · 1976–2000 · 2001–presentLink former page on this page
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