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Gunvor Hofmo

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Norwegian writer
Gunvor Hofmo
Born(1921-06-30)30 June 1921
Died14 October 1995(1995-10-14) (aged 74)
Oslo, Norway
Resting placeVestre gravlund inOslo
NationalityNorwegian
GenrePoetry
Literary movementModernist
PartnerAstrid Tollefsen
ChildrenNone

Gunvor Hofmo (30 June 1921 – 17 October 1995) was aNorwegianwriter, often considered one of Norway's most influentialmodernist poets.[1]

Background

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Gunvor Hofmo was born in Oslo, Norway. Her parents were Erling Hofmo (1893–1959) and Bertha Birkedal (1891–1969). She was raised in a working-class family among socialists, communists and anti-Nazis. Her father's brotherRolf Hofmo (1898–1966) was a sports official who was arrested duringWorld War II and imprisoned at theSachsenhausen concentration camp.[2][3]

Literary career

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Hofmo started her literary career submitting poems for publication to a wide variety of presses, including the communist newspaperFriheten and weekly magazines such asHjemmet. One of her first published poems was dedicated to her lover and Jewish refugeeRuth Maier (1920-1942).It was published inMagasinet for Alle, opening with the lines:

The words, shiningly silent
I shall find
give them to you, hammer some moments together
under the frame of eternity
so you will never forget me

Ruth Maier was anAustrian native who had found refuge in Norway in 1939. During theOccupation of Norway by Nazi Germany, Maier was arrested by German officials in Norway during 1942. She was deported and murdered during theHolocaust atAuschwitz. This event became by all accounts the central tragedy in Hofmo's life. She was hospitalized in 1943 for depression, starting a lifelong struggle with mental illness.[4]

Following the liberation of Norway in 1945, Hofmo traveled extensively. She was inParis in the autumn of 1947 and inBrittany in the spring of 1950. She also made several trips toCopenhagen and also traveled toStockholm,Amsterdam andLondon. She also wrote essays for publication, primarily in the daily newspaperDagbladet. The topics included travel, Nordic poetry, and philosophical topics. Among her most noted contributions are a lengthy debate on the minimal daily cost of living a life barely out of penury inParis and a treatise in defense of her poet colleagueOlav Kaste (1902-1991).[5]In 1953, she stopped publishing essays and instead concentrated on her poetry.Dagbladet published seven of her poems between 1952 and 1956. She published five poetry collections between 1946 and 1955.[6]

She was institutionalized atGaustad Hospital, suffering frommental illness, characterized asschizophrenia, paranoid type, from 1955 to 1971, leading to what was known as her "16 years of silence." Following her discharge, she went into a period of considerable productivity, publishing fifteen poetry collections between 1971 and 1994. From 1977 to her death she never left her apartment atSimensbråten in Oslo.[7][8]

Personal life

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Gunvor Hofmo andRuth Maier both characterized their relationship as unusually close and intimate. In her diary,Ruth Maier describes Gunvor Hofmo as her lover.[9]

In 1947, Hofmo moved in with another writer,Astrid Tollefsen (1897-1973) and became one of the first Norwegians living in an openlylesbian relationship.[10][11] They continued to live and travel together until Hofmo was incapacitated and committed for her mental illness.[12]

Works

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  • Jeg vil hjem til menneskene – (1946) ("I want to go home to the humans")
  • Fra en annen virkelighet – (1948) ("From another reality")
  • Blinde nattergaler – (1951) ("Blind nightingales")
  • I en våkenatt – (1954) ("In a waking night")
  • Testamente til en evighet – (1955) ("A will to an eternity")
  • Treklang – dikt i utvalg (1963) (published withAstrid Hjertenæs Andersen andAstrid Tollefsen) ("Triad")
  • Gjest på jorden – (1971) ("Guest on Earth")
  • November – (1972)
  • Veisperringer – (1973) ("Road barriers")
  • Mellomspill – (1974) ("Interlude")
  • Hva fanger natten – (1976) ("What the night captures")
  • Det er sent – (1978) ("It is late")
  • Nå har hendene rørt meg – (1981) ("Now the hands have touched me")
  • Gi meg til berget – (1984) ("Give me to the mountain")
  • Stjernene og barndommen – (1986) ("The stars and the childhood")
  • Nabot – (1987)
  • Ord til bilder – (1989) ("Words to pictures")
  • Fuglen – (1990) ("The bird")
  • Epilog – (1994) ("Epilogue")
  • Samlede dikt – collected poems(1996)
  • Etterlatte dikt – poems (1997) (posthumously, edited by Jan Erik Vold)
  • Jeg glemmer ingen – poems (1999) (edited by Jan Erik Vold, illustrated with water color paintings by Ruth Maier) ("I forget no one")

Prizes and awards

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References

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  1. ^"Hofmo, Gunvor" (in Norwegian). NRK. 2006-06-17. Retrieved2008-01-24.
  2. ^Jan Erik Vold."Gunvor Hofmo". Norsk biografisk leksikon. RetrievedApril 1, 2018.
  3. ^Matti Goksøyr."Rolf Hofmo". Norsk biografisk leksikon. RetrievedApril 1, 2018.
  4. ^Vibeke Kieding Banik."Ruth Maier". Store norske leksikon. RetrievedApril 1, 2018.
  5. ^Erik Bjerck Hagen."Olav Kaste". Store norske leksikon. RetrievedApril 1, 2018.
  6. ^"Gunvor Hofmo". Store norske leksikon. RetrievedApril 1, 2018.
  7. ^Jan Erik Vold (1996-10-30)."Gunvor Hofmos kraft".Dagbladet (in Norwegian). Retrieved2008-01-24.
  8. ^"Gunvor Hofmo (1921-1995)".Gjennom språket (in Norwegian). Samlaget. Archived fromthe original on 2006-10-02. Retrieved2008-01-25.
  9. ^Maier, Ruth (2009).Le journal de Ruth Maier : de 1933 à 1942, une jeune fille face à la terreur nazie (in French). Vold, Jan Erik, 1939- ..., Impr. France Quercy). Paris: K & B éd.ISBN 978-2-915957-59-4.OCLC 470816964.Dimanche 4 janvier 1942 - les sentiments entre deux personnes vont et viennent avec tant d'instabilité. J'aime toujours Gunvor. Mais je crains de ne pas tarder à ne plus l'aimer. C'est effroyable. (...) Je l'aime maintenant. Mais j'ai le sentiment de ne pas assez l'aimer. Ce que Gunvor est pour moi, personne ne l'a jamais été auparavant: une amie et une amante.
  10. ^Erik Bjerck Hagen."Astrid Tollefsen". Store norske leksikon. RetrievedApril 1, 2018.
  11. ^"Astrid Tellefsen".Dagbladet (in Norwegian). Archived fromthe original on 2007-06-14. Retrieved2008-01-24.I 1947 flyttet hun sammen med en annen kjent norsk lyriker, Gunvor Hofmo, og var en av få som på femtitallet levde i åpent lesbisk samboerskap. De bodde sammen i flere år på Tøyen i Oslo og senere på Sørlandet." - "In 1947 she moved in with another noted Norwegian poet, Gunvor Hofmo, and was one of the few who in the 50s lived in an open lesbian cohabitation arrangement. They lived together for several years at Tøyen in Oslo and later on the south coast.
  12. ^Siri Lindstad (January 2001)."En livslang kjærlighetssorg" (in Norwegian). Blikk. Archived fromthe original on 2008-11-21. Retrieved2008-01-24.Å være åpen lesbisk på 50-tallet var å være en av de ytterst få. I 1947 fant Gunvor likevel en av de andre: den 25 år eldre Astrid Tollefsen, som også snart debuterte som lyriker. De bodde sammen i flere år, helt til Gunvors tvangsforestillinger tok helt overhånd, men det gjorde ikke hennes sex liv, hun fant se en ny partner etterhvert " - "To be openly lesbian in the 1950s was to be among the very few. In 1947 Gunvor nevertheless found one of the others: the 25-year older Astrid Tollefsen,, who would also soon make her debut as a poet. They lived together for several years, until Gunvor's psychotic delusions completely took over.

External links

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Related reading

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