Lucky Per, written at the turn from the nineteenth to the twentieth century (1898-1904), has never before been translated into English, although its author, Henrik Pontoppidan, won the Nobel Prize in literature in 1917 together with his Danish countryman Karl Adolph Gjellerup. Indeed, Pontoppidan's novel was singled out by writers like Thomas Mann and Georg Lucács as seminal in modern world literature. Lucky Per sweeps through every social, religious, literary, and philosophical circle of the 1890s, through the politics of city power brokers, the engineering of new technology, the alien correctives of provincial complacency by the ecumenical culture and complex of Copenhagen's Jewish set, the victims of the Russian pogroms, and the cosmopolitan chastisement imported from the European capitals by the self-exiled Georg Brandes, Danish critic of huge influence and presence, and a character in the novel. The contrast between the Danish capital and provinces is matched by that between Copenhagen and Berlin. The Austrian Alps are host to a clash between a form of progressive post-Darwinian naturalism and conservative Christianity, whereas Italy mediates between comparative morality and the classical and contemporary worlds. Pontoppidan dramatically incorporates the perspectives of the makers of early modernism, such as Brandes, Kierkegaard, Nietzsche, Ibsen, biblical prophets, and Bohemian artists. Trolls from Scandinavian fairy tales haunt the novel's realism without ever letting them bully or appropriate either the life of the fiction or the life of the protagonist from his childhood as the son of a strict Lutheran pastor through the passionate sorrows and joys that led him to his full maturity. It is a rich and riveting work of moral, metaphysical, psychological, philosophical, and literary complexity and depth, carried by a large, varied, vivid, and vibrant cast of characters of all classes and persuasions.
The gardens were founded in 1 844 by Georg Carstensen, and a museum documenting their history is situated in the Hans Christian Andersen Palace (Hans Christian Andersens Boulevard 22). The gardens contain modern carousels and amusement ...
Danske fotografier, før og nu: ny samling med 394 fotos : badeliv, vejret, musik, bryllup, dyrene
Hamlet, Shakespeare's most famous play, is now available in an all-new, illustrated Norton Critical Edition.
Erasmus Lætus' skrift om Christian IVs fødsel og dåb (1577)
Hamlet
A guide to Scandinavia which covers Denmark, Norway, Sweden, and Finland. It features in-depth accounts of all the main towns, critical reviews of accommodation, restaurants and bars, practical guidance on...
The heroic Richard Sharpe finds himself (after victory in "Sharpe's Trafalgar") in Denmark, where he is fighting once again to keep the treacherous French troops at bay.
... Torben , direktør , 2 30 Jensen , André , skibsfører , 188 Jensen , Erling , minister , 132 , 138 Jensen , Helge ... Birthe , sømandskone , 98 Brodersen , Kaj F. , skibsfører , 180 Bruun , Arne , fagforeningsformand , 168 Corner ...
222 189 Original, Handels- og Søfartsmuseet på Kronborg. 225 190 Foto, Kirsten Jappe, Handels og Søfartsmuseet på Kronborg. »7 1 90 Foto, Handels- og Søfartsmuseet på 22S Kronborg. 229 192 Foto, Bruun Rasmussen Kunstauktioner.
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