Hjalmar Gullberg
This article needs additional citations for verification. (April 2013) |
Hjalmar Gullberg | |
---|---|
Born | Malmö, Sweden | 30 May 1898
Died | 19 July 1961 Holmeja, Sweden | (aged 63)
Occupation | writer |
Nationality | Swedish |
Hjalmar Gullberg (30 May 1898 – 19 July 1961) was a Swedish writer, poet and translator of Greek drama into Swedish.
Career[]
Gullberg was born in Malmö, Scania. As a student at Lund University, he was the editor of the student magazine Lundagård. He was the manager of the 1936-1950. In 1940 he was made a member of the Swedish Academy, and he also became an honorary doctor of philosophy at Lund University (1944).
A poem from Gullberg's book Kärlek i tjugonde seklet from 1933, called "Förklädd gud" ("God in disguise"), was set to music by the composer Lars-Erik Larsson in 1940. The resulting lyrical suite has become one of the most well-recognised and best loved pieces of Swedish music for choir and orchestra.[1]
Personal life[]
Gullberg had been suffering from myasthenia gravis, which resulted during his last few years that he was bound to his bed. He had also been tracheotomized, and was for long periods of time connected to a ventilator. He committed suicide on 19 July 1961 by drowning at Lake Yddingen in Scania.[2]
Bibliography[]
- I en främmande stad (1927)
- Sonat (1929)
- Andliga övningar (1932)
- Kärlek i tjugonde seklet (1933)
- Ensamstående bildad herre. Tragicomic verse. (1935)
- Att övervinna världen (1937)
- 100 dikter; a selection from six volumes of verse (1939)
- Röster från Skansen (1941)
- Fem kornbröd och två fiskar (1942; includes Död amazon)
- Hymn till ett evakuerat Nationalmuseum (1942)
- Den heliga natten (1951)
- Dödsmask och lustgård (1952)
- Terziner i okonstens tid (1958)
- Ögon, läppar (1959)
- 50 dikter; a selection from three volumes of verse with an introduction by Carl Fehrman (1961)
- Gentleman, Single, Refined and selected poems, 1937 - 1959 by Hjalmar Gullberg and Judith Moffett. Louisiana State University Press, 1979.
- En anständig och ömklig comoedia. A play in three acts by Hjalmar Gullberg and (published 1984)
- Kärleksdikter (first edition with this title published 1967)
- Dikter. With an epilogue by Anders Palm (1985)
Selected translations and interpretations of other writers' work[]
- Aristophanes: Fåglarna (The Birds) (1928)
- Euripides: Hippolytos (Hippolytus) (1930)
- Euripides: Medea (1931)
- Aristophanes: Lysistrate (Lysistrata) (1932)
- Eurypides: Alkestis (Alcestis) (1933)
- Sophocles: Antigone (1935)
- Molière: Den girige (L'Avare/The Miser) (1935)
- Calderón: Spökdamen (La Dama Duende/The Phantom Lady) (1936)
- Alfred de Musset: Lek ej med kärleken (On ne badine pas avec l'amour) (1936)
- Gabriela Mistral: Dikter (1945)
- Federico García Lorca: Blodsbröllop (Bodas de sangre) (1946)
- Gabriela Mistral: Den heliga vägen (1949)
- Molière: Den inbillade sjuke (Le Malade imaginaire/The Hypochondriac) (translated for Sveriges Radio 1954)
- Gåsmors sagor (1955)
- Själens dunkla natt and other interpretations of foreign lyrics (1956)
- Aeschylus: Agamemnon (1960)
- Franskt 1600-tal (published posthumously in 1962 with an introduction by Olle Holmberg)
- William Shakespeare: Köpmannen i Venedig (The Merchant of Venice) (1964)
- William Shakespeare: Som ni behagar (As You Like It) (1964)
References[]
- ^ "Förklädd gud med Helsingborgs Symfoniorkester" (in Swedish). Sveriges Radio. 28 May 2008. Archived from the original on 3 February 2015. Retrieved 2 February 2015.
- ^ Olofsson, Tommy (15 July 2011). "Det finns en sjö och sedan aldrig mer". Svenska Dagbladet (in Swedish). Retrieved 24 April 2017.
External links[]
- (in Swedish) The Hjalmar Gullberg Society
- 1898 births
- 1961 suicides
- People from Malmö
- Members of the Swedish Academy
- Writers from Scania
- Swedish-language poets
- Swedish male poets
- Swedish male writers
- Swedish translators
- Swedish-language writers
- Suicides by drowning in Sweden
- Translators from Greek
- Lund University alumni
- 20th-century Swedish poets
- 20th-century translators
- 20th-century male writers