Sneha Girap (Editor)

Carl Jóhan Jensen

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Name
  
Carl Jensen

Role
  
Writer

Books
  
Timar og rek


Carl Johan Jensen wwwmsfowpcontentuploads201103CarlJohanJe

Nominations
  
Nordic Council\'s Literature Prize

Harmskjaldur reiðarans - Carl Jóhan Jensen


Carl Jóhan Jensen (2 December 1957 in Tórshavn) is a Faroese writer, poet and literary critic. His books have five times been nominated for the Nordic Council's Literature Prize in 1991, 1998, 2007, 2008 and 2016. In 1989 and 2006 he received the M. A. Jacobsen's Cultural Prize from Tórshavn City Council

Contents

Biography

Jensen grew up in Tórshavn and moved to Denmark in 1973 to attend a Danish gymnasium (a preparatory high school). Having graduated, he moved back to the Faroe Islands in 1976, where he worked in various jobs, i.e. as a journalist. From 1979 to 1981 he studied the Faroese language at the Faroese University in Tórshavn, and from 1981 to 1987 studied Icelandic in Reykjavík. In 1990 he graduated cand.phil. in Faroese.

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He and his Australian wife Kate Sanderson have two sons. They live in Tórshavn, though with a period spent abroad, when Sanderson, having worked for the Faroese government as a special advisor for several years, was sent in 2012 for a three-year term as Faroese embassador to the EU, based in Brussels. Jensen accompanied her.

Awards, nominations etc.

  • 1989 – Received the M. A. Jacobsen's Cultural Prize from Tórshavn City Council
  • 1991 – Nominated for the Nordic Council's Literature Prize
  • 1998 – Nominated for the Nordic Council's Literature Prize
  • 2006 – Received the M. A. Jacobsen's Cultural Prize
  • 2007 – Nominated for the Nordic Council's Literature Prize for his novel Ó – Søgur um djevulsskap
  • 2008 – Nominated for the Nordic Council's Literature Prize for September í bjørkum sum kanska eru bláar
  • 2011 – 1-years grant from the Mentanargrunnur Landsins (Faroese Cultural Fund)
  • 2015 – Received the Mentanarvirðisløn M. A. Jacobsens
  • 2016 – Nominated for the Nordic Council's Literature Prize for Eg síggi teg betri í myrkri
  • References

    Carl Jóhan Jensen Wikipedia