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Karl Gjellerup

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The following article is from The Great Soviet Encyclopedia (1979). It might be outdated or ideologically biased.

Gjellerup, Karl

 

Born June 2, 1857, in Roholte, Denmark; died Oct. 11, 1919, in the village of Klotzsche, Germany. Danish writer.

Gjellerup wrote in Danish and German. His first novel, An Idealist (1878), about the life of young people and woman’s position in society, was written in a bourgeois-radical spirit. Early in his work Gjellerup joined the liberal movement headed by G. Brandes, to whom he dedicated his collection of poetry The Hawthorn (1881). Later he came under the influence of decadence; he was attracted to the philosophy of A. Schopenhauer. His novel A Disciple of the Germans (1882) was critical of bourgeois liberalism. The novels Minna (1889) and The Mill (1896) express abstract ethical ideals. Gjellerup’s later work showed an interest in the religious teachings of India (the novels The Pilgrim Kamanita, 1906, and others). Gjellerup was also the author of plays and critical and historical research.

WORKS

Avelighet og moral. Copenhagen, 1881.
Verdensvandrerne. Copenhagen, 1910.
Den gyldne gren. Copenhagen, 1917.

REFERENCES

Tiander, K. Datsko-russkie issledovaniia, issue 2. St. Petersburg, 1913.
Bang, H. Realisme og realister. Copenhagen, 1879.
Jensen, C. Wore dages digiere. Copenhagen, 1898.

A. A. KITLOV

The Great Soviet Encyclopedia, 3rd Edition (1970-1979). © 2010 The Gale Group, Inc. All rights reserved.
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