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Gustav Wied

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Nationality
  
Danish

Name
  
Gustav Wied


Role
  
Writer

Movies
  
The Nun’s Kiss

Gustav Wied denstoredanskedkapidekifiles3023424058352jpg

Born
  
6 March 1858 Branderslev, Denmark (
1858-03-06
)

Occupation
  
Novelist, short story writer, playwright

Died
  
October 24, 1914, Roskilde, Denmark

Children
  
Jakob Peter, Johan Herman Sofus Wied, Ingermarie Wied

Books
  
Knagsted, To satyrspil, Pastor Sorensen og Co.

Parents
  
Carla Augusta Wieda, Cathrine Caroline

People also search for
  
Ingermarie Wied, Carla Augusta Wieda, Cathrine Caroline, Kirsten Stenbaek, Bent Grasten

Louis Hansen fortæller - Gustav Wied-selskabet


Gustav Johannes Wied (6 March 1858 – 24 October 1914) was a Danish writer.

Contents

The fifth of the eleven children of Carl August Wied and Catha Wied, Gustav was born in Branderslev near Nakskov.

He is generally known as a satirical critic of society in his time and he deliberately used his writing talents to expose the establishment, bourgeoisie and ruling class. The government had him imprisoned for 14 days in 1882 for a short story published in a newspaper. Wied wrote novels, short stories, poems and plays (including several satyr plays).

His best-known work is the Livsens Ondskab (1899) novel, depicting life in a small provincial Danish town, with the customs official Knagsted as a red-bearded satyrical Diogenes openly ridiculing the hypocrisies of the snobbish bourgeois inhabitants, and Emanual Thomsen as a tragic struggler, trying to obtain the funds needed to regain his ancestral farm. In Knagsted (1902) he created a sequel, letting Knagsted comment on contemporary fashionable society in the Bohemian spa resort of Karlsbad (Karlovy Vary).

He eventually lost popularity and suffered from severe stomach aches. Badly affected by his condition and despondent, he committed suicide with an overdose of potassium cyanide in 1914.

Literature

  • John B.C. Watkins, The life and works of Gustav Wied, Ithaca, N.Y., 1944.
  • References

    Gustav Wied Wikipedia