Syllabus/achievement requirements

Primary texts

Camilla Collett: Essays

Knut Hamsun: Hunger (Sult, 1890)

Ludvig Holberg: Jeppe of the Hill (Jeppe paa Bjerget, 1722)

Henrik Ibsen: A Doll’s House (Et dukkehjem, 1879)

Karl Ove Knausg?rd: My Struggle 2 (Min kamp 2, 2011)

Karl Ove Knausg?rd: My Saga Part 1+2 (2015)

 

Secondary Texts (Course Reader/Kompendium)

Helland, Frode (2015): “Three Chinese Dolls”, Ibsen in practice. Relational readings of performance, cultural encounters and power. London: Bloomsbury, 119-173.

Holm, Bent (1994): “Ludvig Holberg and his Double: Holberg in Scandinavia”, Ludvig Holberg. A European Writer. A Study in Influence and Reception, edited by Sven H. Rossel. Amsterdam: Rodopi, 191-225.

Klok, Janke (2009): ”From our European Correspondent – Camilla Collett (1813-1895) and Cultural Transmission”, From Darwin to Weil. Women as Transmitters of Ideas, edited by Petra Broomans. Groningen: Barkhuis, 21-45.

Marker, Frederick J. & Lise-Lone Marker (1996): A History of Scandinavian Theatre. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 50-70.

N?ss, Harald (1993): ”Beginnings of the Norwegian Novel: Hansen and Collett”. A History of Norwegian Literature, edited by Harald N?ss. Lincoln & London: University of Nebraska Press, 102-106.

Rem, Tore (2006): “Ibsen as World Literature: Matters for Exploration“, The Living Ibsen. Proceedings–The 11th International Ibsen Conference, 21-27 August 2006, edited by Frode Helland et al. Oslo: Unipub/Centre for Ibsen Studies,13-20.

Rossel, Sven Hakon (1994): “Ludvig Holberg: The Cosmopolitan. A Monographic Sketch”, Ludvig Holberg. A European Writer. A Study in Influence and Reception, edited by Sven H. Rossel. Amsterdam: Rodopi, 1-40.

 

 

Secondary Texts (Online Sources)

Bartlett, Tom (2016): “A Norse God Among the Lit-Critters“, The Chronicle of Higher Education, February 14, 2016.

Eugenides, Jeffrey (2015): “Norwegian Woods”, The New York Times Book Review, April 26, 2015.

Garton, Janet (1993): ”Camilla Collett (1813-95)”, Norwegian Women’s Writing 1850-1990. London & Atlantic Highlands: Athlone, 27-45.

Hustvedt, Siri (2015): “Knausgaard Writes Like a Woman”, Literary Hub, December 10, 2015.

Klok, Janke (2010): ”Revolutionary Voices: Nordic Women Writers and the Development of Female Urban Prose 1860–1900”, Feminist Review 96, 74-88.

Puchner, Martin (2013): “Goethe, Marx, Ibsen and the Creation of a World Literature“. Ibsen Studies 13:1, 28-46.

Rossi, Riikka (2010): “The Everyday in Nordic Modernism: Knut Hamsun’s Sult and Maria Jotuni’s arkiel?m??, Scandinavian Studies 82:4, 417-38.

Sandberg, Mark B. (1999): “Writing on the Wall: The Language of Advertising in Knut Hamsun’s Sult”, Scandinavian Studies 71:3, 265-96.

Sandberg, Mark B. (2001): “Ibsen and the Mimetic Home of Modernity“. Ibsen Studies 1:2, 32-58.

Shapiro, Eben (2014): “Arts & Entertainment: A Hit in Translation – Small Publisher In Brooklyn Scores A Literary Coup”, Wall Street Journal, June 14, 2014.

Shepherd-Barr, Kirsten (2006): “Ibsen’s Globalism“. Ibsen Studies 6:2, 188-198

Theodorsen, Cathrine (2013): “Cosmopolitan Figures, Forms and Practices in the Norwegian Fin-de-Siècle”, Comparative Critical Studies 10:2, 259-81.

 

Other Sources (will be made available in the course of the semester)

Collett, Camilla: Essays

Jernsletten, Kiki & Troy Storfjell (2016): “Re-Reading Knut Hamsun in Collaboration With Place in Lule Sámi Nordlándda”, Arctic Environmental Modernities. From the Age of Polar Exploration to the Era of the Anthropocene, edited by Lill-Ann K?rber, Scott MacKenzie & Anna Westerst?hl Stenport. Basingstoke: Palgrave Macmillan (forthcoming)

 

 

 

Published May 24, 2016 9:30 AM - Last modified May 27, 2016 9:14 AM