Hjalmar Söderberg

Source: Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia.
Hjalmar Söderberg
Sweden–Norway
Died14 October 1941(1941-10-14) (aged 72)
Copenhagen, Denmark
NationalitySwedish
Period1888–1941
Notable works
Spouse
Children
Statue of Hjalmar Söderberg in front of the National Library of Sweden in Humlegården, Stockholm.

Hjalmar Emil Fredrik Söderberg (2 July 1869 – 14 October 1941) was a Swedish novelist, short story writer, playwright and journalist. His works often deal with melancholy and lovelorn characters, and offer a rich portrayal of contemporary

flaneur. Söderberg is regarded as one of the greatest writers in Swedish literature
. His works are translated to more than twenty languages.

Biography

Born in Stockholm, Söderberg began his literary course at the Swedish news daily

Doktor Glas (Doctor Glas, 1905). In a frightful tale of vengeance and passion, Söderberg stays true to his detached yet emotionally poignant writing style. The love story Den allvarsamma leken (The Serious Game
, 1912) was Söderberg's last conventional novel.

A prolific short story writer, Söderberg published numerous stories in magazines and newspapers that was later collected in short story collections. Following his most famous book of short stories Historietter, these include Främlingarna ("The Strangers", 1903), Det mörknar öfver vägen ("It Is Darkening Over the Road", 1907) and Den talangfulla draken ("The Talented Dragon", 1913).[1]

Söderberg was also a playwright, best known for Gertrud (1906) about the woman Gertrud who abstain the mediocre love from her husband and two lovers and choose to live in loneliness in waiting for the perfect love that may not be. He also wrote the plays Aftonstjärnan ("The Evening Star", 1912) and Ödestimmen ("The Hour of Destiny", 1922).[1]

In his later years, Söderberg turned to journalism and theological studies. His books about Jesus, the novel Jesus Barabbas (1928) and the scientific study Den förvandlade Messias (1932, "The Transformed Messiah"), were highly controversial at the time. In the books Söderberg claimed that Jesus and Barabbas were in fact the same person, and that Jesus was never crucified.[2] His later books also included a collection of poems (Vers och varia, 1921) and a collection of various prose (Resan till Rom, 1929). Söderberg was also an acclaimed translator, translating works by Anatole France, Guy de Maupassant, Charles Baudelaire and Heinrich Heine to Swedish.[2]

He was a fierce critic of Nazism, and wrote often on the subject in the revered Resistance paper Göteborgs Handels- och Sjöfartstidning. He died in Denmark and is buried on Vestre Kirkegård in Copenhagen.

Söderberg was married to Märta Abenius (1871–1932) from 1899 to 1917. They had three children: actress Dora Söderberg-Carlsten (1899–1990), Tom Söderberg (1900–1991), and Mikael Söderberg (1903–1931). From 1917 he was married in Denmark to Emelie Voss (1876–1957), with whom he had one child: actress Betty Søderberg (1910–1993).

Söderberg had a stormy on/off relationship with Maria von Platen (1871–1959) for a number of years; this relationship which is said to have influenced him in his writing, especially his 1906 play Gertrud, and the character of Lydia in The Serious Game.

Themes

The characters in Söderberg's stories always appear to suffer from an incurable loneliness, standing on the side of the events observing themselves and their environment. Feelings of melancholy and nostalgia are prominent.

Doktor Glas and The Serious Game. The latter book has the motto "You do not choose your destiny", which could be the motto of Söderberg's entire authorship.[3]

Legacy

Hjalmar Söderberg is regarded as one of the greatest writers in Swedish literature. His works are still widely read and are frequently published in new editions. His works are translated to more than twenty languages.[2]

A recent reissue of

Doktor Glas into English, as Doctor Glas, and with a perceptive introduction by Margaret Atwood
, has meant a rise in his popularity in the Anglo-Saxon literary world.

Quotations

List of works

  • Förvillelser (1895) – "Delusions"
  • Historietter (1898) – "Short Stories"
  • Martin Bircks ungdom (1901) – "Martin Birck's Youth"
  • Främlingarne (1903) – "The Strangers"
  • Doktor Glas
    (1905) – "Doctor Glas"
  • Gertrud (1906) (play in three acts)
  • Det mörknar över vägen (1907) – "It Is Darkening Over The Road"
  • Valda sidor (1908) – "Taken Sides"
  • Hjärtats oro (1909) – "Worry of the Heart"
  • Den allvarsamma leken
    (1912) – "The Serious Game"
  • Aftonstjärnan (1912) – "The Evening Star" (play in one act)
  • Den talangfulla draken (1913) – "The Talented Dragon"
  • Jahves eld (1918) – "The Fire of Jahve"
  • Ödestimmen (1922) – "The Hour of Destiny" (play in three acts)
  • Jesus Barabbas. Ur löjtnant Jägerstams memoarer (1928)
  • Resan till Rom (1929) – "Trip to Rome"
  • Den förvandlade Messias (1932) – "The Changed/Transformed Messiah"

Works in English

References

  1. ^ a b Lotta Lotass. "Hjalmar Söderberg". Litteraturbanken.
  2. ^ a b c Bure Holmbäck Hjalmar Söderberg Söderbergsällskapet (in Swedish)
  3. ^ Lotta Lotass. "Hjalmar Söderberg (1869-1941)" (in Swedish). Litteraturbanken.

External links

Books