词条 | Sven Delblanc | ||
释义 |
| name = Sven Delblanc | image = | image_size = | alt = | caption = Sven Delblanc | native_name = | native_name_lang = | pseudonym = | birth_name = Sven Delblanc | birth_date = {{birth date|1931|5|26|df=yes}} | birth_place = Swan River, Manitoba, Canada | death_date = {{death date and age|1992|12|15|1931|5|26|df=yes}} | death_place = Sunnersta, Sweden | resting_place = Hammarby kyrkogård | occupation = associate professor of literature, academic, author, translator | language = | nationality = Swedish | alma_mater = Uppsala University | period = 1962–1993 | genres = Prose | subject = | movement = | notableworks = Samuels bok | spouse = | partner = | children = | relatives = | awards = | signature = | website = }} Sven Delblanc, born May 26, 1931 in Swan River, Manitoba, Canada, died December 15, 1992 in Sunnersta, Gottsunda Parish, Uppsala, Sweden was a Swedish author and professor of literature. He is buried in Hammarby kyrkogård in Uppsala, Sweden. Delblanc was an associate professor in the history of literature at Uppsala university beginning in 1965. He received the Aftonbladet Literature Prize in 1965. Before his death he was pointed out as the anonymous writer Bo Balderson. In Sweden Delblanc is considered one of the foremost Swedish authors of the later half of the twentieth century, yet in English-speaking countries he is almost unknown. He was born in Canada but grew up near Vagnhärad, Sweden. His parents divorced and the father, Siegfried Axel Herman Delblanc, remarried. His paternal grandfather, Friedrich Hermann Delblanc, a bookmaker in Stockholm, was from Leipzig, Saxony, Germany. Sven Delblanc's maternal relatives were from Väse in Värmland in the West of Sweden. His maternal grandmother came from Norway. During the fourteenth century the Delblanc family lived in southern France in the vicinity of Le Puy, but during the Napoleonic Era a forefather deserted and went to Germany.[1] The maternal grandfather, Axel Nordfält, was the inspiration to the character Samuel in Samuels bok (1981).[2] The Swedish television series Hedebyborna (1978) is based on Delblanc's series of novels Åminne (1970), Stenfågel (1973), Vinteride (1974) and Stadsporten (1976). Bibliography
Television
Theater
Awards and merits
Footnotes1. ^There are several places in France called Le Puy, and at least three of them could be described as being in southern France. With the passage of time and movement between countries, it may never be known to which one the citations refer. 2. ^Delblanc, Sven. Livets ax. Bonniers, 1991. p. 84. External links
10 : 1931 births|1992 deaths|20th-century Swedish novelists|Swedish-language writers|Writers from Manitoba|People from Swan River, Manitoba|Nordic Council Literature Prize winners|Litteris et Artibus recipients|Swedish male novelists|20th-century Swedish male writers |
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