词条 | Aasmund Olavsson Vinje |
释义 |
| name = Aasmund Olavsson Vinje | image =Portrett av forfatter Aasmund Olavsson Vinje.jpg | imagesize = | birth_name = Aasmund Olavsson Vinje | birth_date = {{birth date|df=yes|1818|4|6}} | birth_place = Vinje, Telemark, Norway | death_date = {{death date and age|df=yes|1870|7|30|1818|4|6}} | death_place = Gran in Hadeland, Oppland, Norway | occupation = Journalist, poet, essayist | nationality = Norwegian }}Aasmund Olavsson Vinje (6 April 1818 – 30 July 1870) was a famous Norwegian poet and journalist who is remembered for poetry, travel writing, and his pioneering use of Landsmål (now known as Nynorsk).[1] BackgroundVinje was born into a poor but well-read family in Vinje, Telemark. He had a voracious appetite for learning and supported himself in part by teaching. He earned his university entrance exam after attending the same school as Henrik Ibsen, studied law, and became an attorney. CareerVinje founded the periodical Dølen (The dales-man) in 1858, in which he published travel accounts, and editorial comments on art, language and politics that serve as records for the period in which he lived. Dølen ceased publication in 1870. Vinje did much to articulate the difference between city and rural life in Norway and was among the sophisticated exponents of Norwegian romantic nationalism. Despite this, he was also known for his critical scepticism and double views (No: tvisyn) - that is, looking at both sides of the coin. He was politically active to the extent that the government fired him from his work as an attorney for criticizing its foreign policy. Among his writings, the Ferdaminni fraa Sumaren 1860 (A remembrance of a journey in the summer 1860, not translated), rank in high esteem in Norwegian literature, describing a journey on foot from Oslo to Trondheim in order to cover the coronation of King Charles in the Nidarosdomen cathedral for his periodical. It can be seen as a program for Vinje and the Dølen that the description deals more warm-hearted with his meetings with ordinary people along the journey, than with the royalties he encountered at the coronation. In 1863 he wrote A Norseman's View of Britain and the British, which was translated into Norwegian ten years later. Some of Vinje's poetry is still very much alive in Norway, especially the poems Ved Rundarne (English: At Rondane) and Våren (English: The Last Spring) with tunes by Edvard Grieg. Edvard Grieg composed melodies for many of Vinje's poems, and in 1881, Grieg published Tolv Melodier til Digte af A. O. Vinje (English: Twelve melodies to Poems of A. O. Vinje, for voice and piano), Opus 33, which include The Last Spring and At Rondane.[2] [3]Dying from stomach cancer, Vinje decided to spend his last days in the countryside. He died as a guest of his friend, minister (later bishop) Anton Christian Bang at Gran in Hadeland on 30 July 1870 and is buried nearby in the churchyard of the Sister churches at Granavollen (Søsterkirkene). In 1873, a large monument with a bust of Vinjes by Brynjulf Bergslien was erected at the site.[4] Today Aasmund Vinje paths exist in several Norwegian cities and towns including Oslo, Stavanger, Trondheim, Moss, Fjellhamar, Corby, Hamar, Gjøvik, Rjukan, Skien and Mandal. SloganA 2014 Dagsavisen article said that he coined the most Norwegian of slogans, "Det er saa viktig aa kosa seg!"[5] [It is so important to enjoy oneself!] Selected works
Memorials
See also
References{{ reflist}}{{Commons category|Aasmund Olavsson Vinje}}Other sources
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16 : 1818 births|1879 deaths|People from Vinje|Nynorsk-language writers|Norwegian essayists|Norwegian travel writers|Norwegian language|Norwegian male poets|Norwegian newspaper editors|Deaths from stomach cancer|19th-century journalists|Male journalists|19th-century Norwegian poets|Male essayists|19th-century Norwegian male writers|19th-century essayists |
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