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Villy Sørensen

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Nationality
  
Danish

Role
  
Short story writer


Name
  
Villy Sorensen

Period
  
1953-2001

Literary movement
  
Modernism

Villy Sørensen Villy Srensen


Born
  
13 January 1929 Frederiksberg (
1929-01-13
)

Occupation
  
Author, philosopher, essayist

Died
  
December 16, 2001, Copenhagen, Denmark

Awards
  
Nordic Council\'s Literature Prize

Books
  
Saere historier, Harmless Tales, Seneca - the humanist, The Downfall of the Gods, Tutelary tales

Similar People
  
Hans Christian Andersen, Soren Kierkegaard, Franz Kafka, Friedrich Schiller, Robert Ingpen

Education
  
University of Copenhagen

Villy Sørensen (13 January 1929 – 16 December 2001) was a Danish short-story writer, philosopher and literary critic of the Modernist tradition. His fiction was heavily influenced by his philosophical ideas, and he has been compared to Franz Kafka in this regard. He was the most influential and important Danish philosopher since Søren Kierkegaard.

Villy Sørensen Villy Srensen Gyldendal Den Store Danske

History

Villy Sørensen Villy Srensen Gyldendal Den Store Danske

Born in Copenhagen, Sørensen graduated from the Vestre Borgerdydskole in 1947, and then attended the University of Copenhagen and the University of Freiburg studying philosophy. Although he did not graduate, he later received an honorary degree from the University of Copenhagen.

Villy Sørensen Villy Srensen var da kulturkonservativ Information

Sørensen published his first collection of short stories, Strange Stories in 1953, which many critics have identified as being the start of Danish literary Modernism. He published additional collections of short stories in 1955 and 1964, all winning various awards in Denmark. These stories generally explored the absurd and hidden parts of the human psyche.

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Sørensen began editing the journal Vindrosen (with Klaus Rifbjerg) in 1959. Afterward, he became a member of the Danish Academy in 1965, subsequently editing several other Modernist journals and periodicals. Sørensen, though he continued to produce short fiction throughout his life, was also deeply engaged in philosophy, about which he wrote many essays and several books including Seneca: The Humanist at the Court of Nero and his response to Søren Kierkegaard's Either/Or, Hverken-eller (i.e. "Neither/Nor"). He also published books and essays about Nietzsche, Kafka, Marx, Schopenhauer and Kierkegaard, and was a notable translator of over 20 books. He was awarded the Grand Prize of the Danish Academy in 1962, The Nordic Council's Literature Prize in 1974, the Hans Christian Andersen Award in 1983, the inaugural Swedish Academy Nordic Prize in 1986, along with many other awards and recognitions. He died in Copenhagen in 2001.

Villy Sørensen Villy Srensen

Villy Sørensen Stvet sag om stor Srensen

References

Villy Sørensen Wikipedia