- Inger Christensen
Inger Christensen (born
16 January 1935 ) is a Danish poet, novelist, and essayist.Born in the town of
Vejle , on the eastern,Jutland coast of Denmark, Inger Christensen is considered the foremost poetic experimentalist of her generation. After graduating fromVejle Gymnasium , she moved toCopenhagen and, later, toÅrhus , studying at the Teachers’ College there. She received her certificate in 1958. During this same period, Christensen began publishing poems in the journalHvedekorn , and was guided by the noted Danish poet and criticPoul Borum (1934–1995), whom she married in 1959 and divorced in 1976.After teaching at the
College for Arts inHolbæk from 1963 to 1964, she turned to writing full time, producing two of her major early collections, " [http://da.wikipedia.org/wiki/Lys Lys] " ("Light", 1962) and "Græs " ("Grass", 1963), both examining the limits of self-knowledge and the role oflanguage inperception . Her major work of the 1960s, however, was the highly acclaimed masterwork "det " ("It"), which, on one level, explored social, political and aesthetic issues, but more deeply probed large philosophical questions of meaning. The work, almost incantatory in tone, opposes issues such as fear and love and power and powerlessness.In these years Christensen also published two novels, "
Evighedsmaskinen " (1964) and"Azorno " (1967), as well as a shorter fiction on the ItalianRenaissance painterMantegna , presented from the viewpoint of various narrators (Mantegna’s secretary Marsilio, the Turkish princess Farfalla, and Mantagena’s young son), Det malede Værelse (1976, translated into English as "The Painted Room " byHarvill Press in 2000).Much of Christensen’s work is organized upon “systemic” structures in accordance with her belief that poetry is not truth and not even the “dream” of truth, but “is a game, maybe a tragic game—the game we play with a world that plays its own game with us.”
In the 1981 masterpiece, "alfabet", Christensen uses the
alphabet (from a [“apricots”] to n [“nights”] ) along with the Fibonacci mathematical sequence in which the next number is the sum of the two previous ones (0, 1, 1, 2, 3, 5, 8, 13, 21, 34…). As she explains: “The numerical ratios exist in nature: the way a leek wraps around itself from the inside, and the head of a snowflower, are both based on this series.” Her system ends on the n, suggesting many possible meanings including “n’s” significance as any whole number. As with "det", however, despite its highly structured elements this work is a poetically evocative series concerned with oppositions such as an outpouring of the joy of the world counterposed with the fears for and forces poised for its destruction."Sommerfugledalen" of 1991 ("", 2004) explores through the
sonnet structure the fragility of life and mortality, ending in a kind of transformation.Christensen has also written works for children, plays, radio pieces, and numerous essays, the most notable of which were collected in her book Hemmelighedstilstanden ("
The State of Secrecy ") in 2000.In 1978, she was appointed to the
Danish Academy , and in 1994, she became a member of theAcadémie Européenne de Poésie . She won theAustrian State Prize for European Literature in 1994, theNordic Prize in the same year, theEuropean Poetry Prize in 1995,The America Award in 2001, and has received numerous other distinctions. Her works have been translated into several languages, and she has been frequently mentioned as a candidate for theNobel Prize in literature .External links
* [http://www.kirjasto.sci.fi/ingerc.htm Biography including selected works]
* [http://www.erasmuspc.com/index.php?id=18273&type=article Poem of Christensen painted on a wall in Copenhagen]
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