Kroppslighet og jomfrukur i Hans E. Kincks tragedie <i>Den sidste Gjest</i> (1910)

In his play on Pietro Aretino (1492-1556), the Norwegian dramatist and novelist Hans E. Kinck (1865-1926) focuses on his character's relationship to the body and use of young women, in particular the young girl, Perina. A writer of great repute among his contemporaries Aretino is today known fo...

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Main Author: Roy Eriksen
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Septentrio Academic Publishing 2011-06-01
Series:Nordlit: Tidsskrift i litteratur og kultur
Subjects:
Online Access:https://septentrio.uit.no/index.php/nordlit/article/view/1805
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spelling doaj-7a0761020fb146d3aa186dc7a7d7cc2f2020-11-25T01:14:22ZengSeptentrio Academic PublishingNordlit: Tidsskrift i litteratur og kultur 0809-16681503-20862011-06-0115110.7557/13.18051680Kroppslighet og jomfrukur i Hans E. Kincks tragedie <i>Den sidste Gjest</i> (1910)Roy Eriksen0Universitetet i AgderIn his play on Pietro Aretino (1492-1556), the Norwegian dramatist and novelist Hans E. Kinck (1865-1926) focuses on his character's relationship to the body and use of young women, in particular the young girl, Perina. A writer of great repute among his contemporaries Aretino is today known for his letters, plays, scandalous dialogues and pornographic sonnets in which grotesque images of the body are frequent. Kinck turns the Italian letterato both into a tragic victim of his own drives and a ruthless victimizer, although he in the process must avoid many aspects of Aretino's writing and character that it would be impossible to reproduce in print at the time, but in so doing he both rejects and redescripts metaphors for the body and writing we recognize from Rabelais, Shakespeare, and Nashe. Aretino's famed obesity and incessant appetite become metaphors for Aretino's struggle for fame and immortality, but are also signs of the fetishization and expenditure of young girls in Early Modern Venetian society, and in the Europe of Kinck's own time. This reading "against the grain" tries to ease out the actuality of the play and the reason for the different data Kinck gives for Perina's age in the play and in En Penneknegt (1911). https://septentrio.uit.no/index.php/nordlit/article/view/1805Pietro AretinoHans E. Kincktragediekroppslighetmetaforikkjomfrukur
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Roy Eriksen
spellingShingle Roy Eriksen
Kroppslighet og jomfrukur i Hans E. Kincks tragedie <i>Den sidste Gjest</i> (1910)
Nordlit: Tidsskrift i litteratur og kultur
Pietro Aretino
Hans E. Kinck
tragedie
kroppslighet
metaforikk
jomfrukur
author_facet Roy Eriksen
author_sort Roy Eriksen
title Kroppslighet og jomfrukur i Hans E. Kincks tragedie <i>Den sidste Gjest</i> (1910)
title_short Kroppslighet og jomfrukur i Hans E. Kincks tragedie <i>Den sidste Gjest</i> (1910)
title_full Kroppslighet og jomfrukur i Hans E. Kincks tragedie <i>Den sidste Gjest</i> (1910)
title_fullStr Kroppslighet og jomfrukur i Hans E. Kincks tragedie <i>Den sidste Gjest</i> (1910)
title_full_unstemmed Kroppslighet og jomfrukur i Hans E. Kincks tragedie <i>Den sidste Gjest</i> (1910)
title_sort kroppslighet og jomfrukur i hans e. kincks tragedie <i>den sidste gjest</i> (1910)
publisher Septentrio Academic Publishing
series Nordlit: Tidsskrift i litteratur og kultur
issn 0809-1668
1503-2086
publishDate 2011-06-01
description In his play on Pietro Aretino (1492-1556), the Norwegian dramatist and novelist Hans E. Kinck (1865-1926) focuses on his character's relationship to the body and use of young women, in particular the young girl, Perina. A writer of great repute among his contemporaries Aretino is today known for his letters, plays, scandalous dialogues and pornographic sonnets in which grotesque images of the body are frequent. Kinck turns the Italian letterato both into a tragic victim of his own drives and a ruthless victimizer, although he in the process must avoid many aspects of Aretino's writing and character that it would be impossible to reproduce in print at the time, but in so doing he both rejects and redescripts metaphors for the body and writing we recognize from Rabelais, Shakespeare, and Nashe. Aretino's famed obesity and incessant appetite become metaphors for Aretino's struggle for fame and immortality, but are also signs of the fetishization and expenditure of young girls in Early Modern Venetian society, and in the Europe of Kinck's own time. This reading "against the grain" tries to ease out the actuality of the play and the reason for the different data Kinck gives for Perina's age in the play and in En Penneknegt (1911).
topic Pietro Aretino
Hans E. Kinck
tragedie
kroppslighet
metaforikk
jomfrukur
url https://septentrio.uit.no/index.php/nordlit/article/view/1805
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