Inger Hagerup

Inger Hagerup ( born April 12, 1905 in Bergen, † 6 February 1985 ) was a Norwegian poet and writer. She debuted in 1939 and wrote on Riksmål.

As Inger Johanne Halsør born, she made her Abitur in Volda and went to the business school in Oslo. In 1931 she married the teacher Anders Hagerup and participated in its surnames, with whom she was known. Both lived at first in the Norwegian province of Sogn og Fjordane. When the Second World War she fled but then to Stockholm. She was his life convinced atheist and communist.

Inger Hagerup debuted in 1939 with " Jeg vil gikk meg i skogene ". It was followed by other collections that were sold in high volumes. In addition to her poetry, she also published a number of plays and children's books. Many of her poems set to music in the seventies singer-songwriter Finn Kalvik. Appeared in 1976, the complete edition » Samlede dikt ".

Translated the English novel Lord of the Flies ( Lord of the Flies ) into Norwegian.

The later years she spent with her husband together in Fredrikstad. Her two sons Klaus Hagerup and Helge Hagerup are also writers.

Bibliography

  • Jeg gikk meg vill i skogene, 1939
  • Flukten til America, 1942
  • Videre, Stockholm 1944, Oslo 1945
  • The syvende natt, 1947
  • Sann vil du ha meg. 30 utvalgte dikt om kjærlighet, 1949
  • Så rart ( barnevers ), 1950
  • Mitt skip seiler, 1951
  • Hilsen fra Katarina ( hørespill ), 1953
  • Drømmeboken, 1955
  • The tredje utvei ( drama ), 1956
  • Strofe med vinden, 1958
  • Lille Persille ( barnevers ), 1961
  • Fra hjertets crater, 1964
  • Dikt i utvalg, 1965
  • Det commercial en pike gående ( erindringsbok ), 1965
  • Hva du skal ago nede? ( erindringsbok ), 1966
  • Trekkfuglene above skjæra, 1967
  • Ut og Soke tjeneste ( erindringsbok ), 1968
  • Østenfor kjærlighet, vestenfor drøm ( noveller ), med Karin Beate Vold, 1977
  • Samlede dikt, 1985

Works in German translation

  • Inger Hagerup: Selected Poems. Norwegian - German. Edited, translated and with an afterword by Annette Rodenberg. Ivory Verlag, Berlin 2005, ISBN 3-932245-72-5.
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