- Aniara (poem)
"Aniara" (full original title: "Aniara : en revy om människan i tid och rum" [cite web | title = Harry Martinson - Bibliography | url = http://nobelprize.org/nobel_prizes/literature/laureates/1974/martinson-bibl.html Martinson's bibliography at Nobel Foundation's website] )is a
poem ofscience fiction written by the Swedish Nobel laureateHarry Martinson in1956 . It was published on13 October 1956 .Preface to cite book | last=Martinson | first= Harry | coauthors=Maria Cristina Lombardi, ed. | title=Aniara. Odissea nello spazio | publisher=Scheiwiller |year=2005 | isbn=88-7644-481-5 , the Italian edition of "Aniara".] The title comes from ancient Greek ἀνιαρός, "sad, despairing", plus special resonances that the sound "a" had for Martinson.The poem consists of 103
canto s and relates the tragedy of aspace ship which, originally bound for Mars with a cargo of colonists from the ravaged Earth, after an accident is ejected from thesolar system and into anexistential struggle. The style is symbolic, sweeping and innovative for its time, with creative use ofneologisms to suggest thescience fiction al setting::We listen daily to the sonic coins:provided every one of us and played:through the Finger-singer worn on the left hand.:We trade coins of diverse denominations::and all of them play all that they contain:and though a dyma 1 scarcely weighs one grain:it plays out like a cricket on each hand:blanching here in this distraction-land.
The first 29
canto s of "Aniara" had previously been published in Martinson's collection "Cikada" (1953), under the title "Sången om Doris och Mima" ("The Song of Doris and Mima"), relating the departure from Earth, the accidental near-collision with an asteroid (incidentally namedHondo , another name for the main Japanese isle whereHiroshima is situated) and ejection from the solar system, the first few years of increasing despair and distractions of the passengers, until news is received of the destruction of their home port (and perhaps of Earth). According to Martinson, he dictated the initial cycle as in a fever after a troubling dream, affected by theCold War and the Soviet suppression of the1956 Hungarian revolution ; in another version, the first 29 cantos were said to be inspired by an astronomic observation ofAndromeda Galaxy .One of the major themes explored is the nature and necessity of
art , symbolised by the semi-mystical machinery of the "Mima", who relieves the ennui of crew and passengers with scenes of far-off times and places, and whose operator is also the sometimes naïve main narrator. The rooms of Mima, according to Martinson, represent different kinds of life styles or forms of consciousness. The accumulated destruction the Mima witnesses impels her to destroy herself in despair, to which she, the machine, is finally moved by the "white tears of the granite" melted by the "phototurb" which annihilates their home port, the great city of Dorisburg. Without the succour of the Mima, the erstwhile colonists seek distraction in sensual orgies, memories of their own and earlier lives, low comedy, religious cults, observations of strange astronomical phenomena, empty entertainments, science, routine tasks, brutal totalitarianism, and in all kinds of human endeavour, but ultimately cannot face the emptiness outside and inside.In form, the poems are metrical and mostly
rhyme d, using both traditional and individual forms, several alluding to a wide range of Swedish and Nordic poetry, such as e.g. the FinnishKalevala .An
opera byKarl-Birger Blomdahl also called "Aniara" premiered in1959 with alibretto byErik Lindegren based on Martinson's poem; it was also staged in Hamburg, Brussels and Darmstadt.cite web | title = Harry Martinson: Catching the Dewdrop, Reflecting the Cosmos | last=Larsson | first=Ulf | url = http://nobelprize.org/nobel_prizes/literature/articles/larsson/index.html]"Aniara" has been translated in English as "Aniara, A Review of Man in Time and Space" by
Hugh MacDiarmid and E. Harley Schubertcite web | title=Harry Martinson | url=http://www.kirjasto.sci.fi/harrymar.htm | accessdate=2007-09-30 Here a bibliography of texts (mostly in Swedish) about Martinson and "Aniara" can also be found.] in 1956; a new English translation has been published in 1999.The poem was referenced inVernor Vinge 's science fiction novel "A Fire Upon the Deep ".References
ee also
*
Karin Boye , the author of "Kallocain ", one of the few Swedish science-fiction works of the 1940s.
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