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Encyclopedia > Isak Dinesen
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Blixen in Kenya, 1918

Isak Dinesen (April 17, 1885-September 7, 1962) was a pen name for the Danish author Karen Blixen. Blixen wrote works both in Danish and in English. She is best known, at least in English, for her account of living in Kenya, Out of Africa.


She was born into a Unitarian aristocratic family in Rungsted, and was schooled in art at Copenhagen, Paris, and Rome. She began publishing fiction in various Danish periodicals in 1905 under the pen name Osceola.


In 1914 she married her cousin, Baron Bror von Blixen-Finecke, and the couple relocated to Kenya where they operated a coffee plantation. After several infidelities on the husband's part, the couple separated in 1921, and the Baron returned to Denmark. The divorce was finalized in 1925. Karen Blixen remained in Kenya and continued to operate the plantation until the collapse of the coffee market in 1931 forced her to abandon the project.


She returned to Denmark and began writing in earnest, publishing Seven Gothic Tales (a collection of short stories) in English in 1934. She would go on to publish several other works simultaneously in Danish and English, mostly collections of short stories; she also wrote a novel entitled The Angelic Avengers, under the pseudonym of Pierre Andrezel. She was awarded the Tagea Brandt Rejselegat in 1939.


She died in Rungsted, apparently from malnutrition. She had suffered for many years from syphilis contracted from her husband.


Works

  • The Hermits (1907, published in a Danish journal under the name Osceola)
  • The Ploughman (1907, published in a Danish journal under the name Osceola)
  • The de Cats Family (1909, published in Tilskueren)
  • The Revenge of Truth (1926, published in Denmark)
  • Seven Gothic Tales (1934 in USA, 1935 in Denmark)
  • Out of Africa (1937 in Denmark and England, 1938 in USA)
  • Winter's Tales (1942)
  • The Angelic Avengers (1947)
  • Last Tales (1957)
  • Anecdotes of Destiny (1958)
  • Shadows on the Grass (1960 in England and Denmark, 1961 in USA)
  • Ehrengard (posthumous 1963, USA)
  • Carnival: Entertainments and Posthumous Tales (posthumous 1977, USA)
  • Daguerreotypes and Other Essays (posthumous 1979, USA)
  • On Modern Marriage and Other Observations (posthumous 1986, USA)
  • Letters from Africa, 1914-1931 (posthumous 1981, USA)
  • Karen Blixen i Danmark: Breve 1931-1962 (posthumous 1996, Denmark)

See also

External link


  Results from FactBites:
 
The African God of Isak Dinesen - The World and I Magazine (7302 words)
Consonant with her other comments, Dinesen is contending that the distinction between God and the Devil as separate persons (or personalities) is a work of human imagination, an abstraction away from the reality of god and the Devil as an antinomy or union of opposites.
As Dinesen has one of her fictional characters think elsewhere, "The real difference between God and human beings… is that God cannot stand continuance." God pronounces his word not just once, but many times, and his utterances are not necessarily consistent with one another.
Dinesen's attitude to conflict means that both her admonition to love "the pride of you neighbor as your own" and her personal declaration "I will love the pride of my adversaries" are radical statements differing markedly from Christ's "Love your neighbor as yourself".
Isak Dinesen in America (5228 words)
Karen Dinesen, in contrast, was born in 1885.
Dinesen also met a young man less famous than those I've mentioned but important to the future life of Isak Dinesen in America after Karen Blixen had died and been buried in Denmark three-and-a-half years later, on September 11, 1962.
A serious study by so respected a scholar as Robert Langbaum went far to establish Isak Dinesen as an important literary artist not to be taken lightly on the basis of her popular appeal, which she shared, after all, with Charles Dickens.
  More results at FactBites »


 

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