Þórbergur Þórðarson

Þórbergur Þórðarson (Thórbergur Thórdarson) (Hali í Suðursveit, 12 March 1888/1889[1]Reykjavík, 12 November 1974) was an Icelandic author and Esperantist.

Þórbergur Þórðarson
Born(1888-03-12)12 March 1888
Hali, Suðursveit, Iceland
Died12 November 1974(1974-11-12) (aged 86)
Reykjavík, Iceland
OccupationWriter, poet, essayist
LanguageIcelandic
NationalityIcelandic
Period1924–1970
SpouseMargrét Jónsdóttir

An ironist, satirist, volatile critic, and ground-breaking achiever in experimental auto-fiction, Þórbergur arguably remains among Iceland's most beloved 20th century authors.

Þórbergur was an autodidact. As recounted in his largely autobiographical works, Íslenzkur aðall (1938) and Ofvitinn (1940), Þórbergur lived in poverty for much of his youth and early adulthood and could not afford secondary or higher education.

The 1934 trial for offending Nazis

In January 1934, Þórbergur wrote a series of essays for the socialist daily Alþýðublaðið, titled "The Nazis' Sadistic Appetite" ("Kvalaþorsti nazista"[2]). Iceland's public prosecutor filed charges against Þórðarson for supposedly offensive clauses in the article, one of which labelled Adolf Hitler "a sadist". The Supreme Court of Iceland agreed with the prosecutor and found the author guilty of "derogating a foreign nation". The court sentenced Þórbergur to pay a fine of 200 krónur.[3]

English translations

The relatively little of Þórbergur's work which has been translated into English consists mainly of fragments from his larger works. Portions of Íslenzkur aðall (1938) were published as In Search of My Beloved in 1967. In recent years, Professor Julian Meldon D'arcy has translated a fragment from Bréf til Láru (1924) as a short story, titled "When I got pregnant", as well as the first full book to appear in English translation: The Stones Speak (2012), Þórbergur's childhood memoirs, originally published as Steinarnir tala in 1956.

Bibliography

  • 1915: Hálfir skósólar
  • 1917: Spaks manns spjarir
  • 1922: Hvítir hrafnar (reprint of "Hálfir skósólar" and "Spaks manns spjarir")
  • 1924: Bréf til Láru
  • 1938: Íslenzkur aðall (Portions published in English as In Search of My Beloved by Twayne Publishers, 1967)
  • 1940–1941: Ofvitinn
  • 1945–1950: Ævisaga Árna Þórarinssonar prófasts, (memoirs of Árni Þórarinsson)
  • 1954–1955: Sálmurinn um blómið
  • 1956: Steinarnir tala (Published in English as The Stones Speak by Mál og menning, Reykjavík 2012)
  • 1960: Ritgerðir 1924–1959 (essays)
  • 1975: Í Suðursveit
  • 2010: In the Footsteps of a Storyteller (excerpts accompanied by photographs, Forlagið 2010)

Museum

Þórbergssetur museum and cultural centre in Hali, Suðursveit

On 30 June 2006, Þórbergssetur, a museum and cultural center in Hali, Suðursveit, Iceland devoted to Þórbergur's work, was inaugurated.

Notes

gollark: The thing is, though, richer people are more likely to be able to usefully support their children™.
gollark: On *some* servers I read all the messages, but not this one.
gollark: hahahai have broken the econononomy
gollark: ++delete jobs
gollark: Food is a BOURGEOISIE MYTH.

References

  • Íslenska Alfræðiorðabókin P-Ö. 1990. Editors: Dóra Hafsteinsdóttir and Sigríður Harðardóttir. Örn og Örlygur hf., Reykjavík.

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