Gunnar Ekelöf

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Gunnar Ekelöf (Stockholm, September 15, 1907 - Sigtuna, March 16, 1968) was a Swedish poet and writer. He was a member of the Swedish Academy from 1958. He was also awarded a honorary doctorate in philosophy by Uppsala University in 1958. He won a number of prizes for his poetry.

Gunnar Ekelöf has become described as Sweden's first surrealistic poet, after he debuted with the poetry collection sent på jorden in 1932, a work that was too unconventional to become widely appreciated. [1] But Ekelöf moved towards romanticism and got betters reviews for his second poetry collection Dedikation in 1934. A work that became influential for later Swedish poets was his Färjesång in 1941, a finely expressed blend of romanticism, surrealism, and the dark clouds of the ongoing war.

Contents

[edit] Selected works

  • Sent på jorden "Late on Earth", poems (1932)
  • Fransk surrealism "French Surrealism", translations (1933)
  • Dedikation "Dedication", poems (1934)
  • Hundra år modern fransk dikt "100 Years of Modern French Poetry", translations (1934)
  • Sorgen och stjärnan "The Sorrow and the Star", poems (1936)
  • Köp den blindes sång "Buy the Blind Man's Song", poems (1938)
  • Färjesång "Ferrysong", poems (1941)
  • Promenader "Walks", essays (1941)
  • Non serviam "Non Serviam", poems (1945)
  • Utflykter "Excursions", essays (1947)
  • Om hösten "In Autumn", poems (1951)
  • Strountes "Nonsense", poems (1955)
  • Blandade kort "Shuffled Cards", essays (1957)
  • Opus incertum "Opus Incertum", poems (1959)
  • En Mölna-elegi "A Mölna-Elegy", poem (1960)
  • Valfrändskaper "Elective Affinities", translations (1960)
  • En natt i Otocac "A night in Otocac", poems (1961)
  • Diwan över Fursten av Emgión "Diwan on the King of Emgion", poems (1965)
  • Sagan om Fatumeh "The Tale of Fatumeh", poems (1966)
  • Vägvisare till underjorden poems (1967) (Guide to the Underworld, trans. Rika Lesser)
  • Partitur "Partiture" poems (1969)
  • Lägga patience essays (1969)
  • En självbiografi "An Autobiography", miscellanaeus (1971)
  • En röst "A Voice" (1973)
  • Selected Poems of Gunnar Ekelöf, translated by Muriel Rukeyser ahd Leif Sjöberg, (New York: Twayne Publishers, 1967)

[edit] Source

[edit] References

  1. ^ Lundkvist, Martinsson, Ekelöf, by Espmark & Olsson, in Delblanc, Lönnroth, Göransson, vol 3

[edit] External links

Preceded by
Bertil Malmberg
Swedish Academy,
Seat No.18

1958-1968
Succeeded by
Artur Lundkvist