Alexia Bohwim
Alexia Bohwim or Alexia Knutsdatter Bohwim (born March 13, 1969 in Oslo) is a Norwegian writer, animal rights activist and feminist.
Life[]
Bohwim made her debut in 2008 with the cult novel Frognerfitter.[1] The book is about two girlfriends Billie and Susie, who live at Frogner in Oslo (where Bohwim grew up), and describes their lifestyle which includes a lot of drinking and sex, and addresses some of the myths that exist about people who live there. The book was published by Kagge Forlag and sold 40,000 copies.[2]
Since then Bohwim has written two books, MILF (2010) and Golddigger (2012), and has created a blog.[3][4] This was later censored and banned. She has acquired the reputation of being outspoken and controversial. She has outspoken views about sex roles, life in Frogner and feminism.
For over four years, filmmaker Nina Grünfeld has followed Bohwim, and created a documentary about her life. The idea was to follow her for at least ten years, then to make a cinema documentary about living a different life. Over the years, she has been half-naked in several magazines, and describes herself as "a narcissist with empathy".[4]
Alexia Bohwim has studied Norwegian movie history, movie history and is currently writing about the links between the deportation of the Norwegian jews and the cultural elite.
Frogner Babylon came September 2021 and is a sequel to Frognerfitter.
She updates her homepage when she wants to attract British punk legends.
Alexia Bohwim loves Fred Perry and tennis.
Family[]
Bohwim's father is film director Knut Bohwim.[5]
Works[]
- Frognerfitter : roman Oslo : Kagge, 2008. ISBN 9788248907541
- MILF roman, Oslo Kagge 2010. ISBN 9788248909422
- Golddigger roman, Oslo Kagge 2012. ISBN 9788248912965
- Frogner Babylon, roman, Cappelen Damm 2021
References[]
- ^ Bohwim, Alexia. (2008). Frognerfitter : roman (2. opplag ed.). Oslo: Kagge. ISBN 9788248907541. OCLC 488632721.
- ^ Fotl, Maiken Nøtsund (2009-01-26). "Fest for «Frognerfitter»- forfatter". Dagbladet.no (in Norwegian). Retrieved 2019-07-10.
- ^ Haugan, Adrian Møller. "Feminist: - Menn er bedre til alt". www.side3.no (in Norwegian). Retrieved 2019-07-10.
- ^ Jump up to: a b Westeng, Kjersti. "Lager dokumentarserie om Alexia Bohwim: - Vanskelig for nordmenn å akseptere hennes grenseløse liv". Nettavisen (in Norwegian). Retrieved 2019-07-10.
- ^ "Knut Bohwim". IMDb. Retrieved 2019-07-10.
- 1969 births
- Living people
- People from Oslo
- Norwegian writers
- Feminist writers
- Norwegian novelists
- Norwegian writer stubs