Artigo Acesso aberto Revisado por pares

The Fish Can Sing by Halldór Laxness: Holding fast against vanity and illusion

2017; Cambridge University Press; Volume: 23; Issue: 6 Linguagem: Inglês

10.1192/apt.bp.116.016675

ISSN

2056-4686

Autores

David S. Baldwin,

Tópico(s)

Arctic and Russian Policy Studies

Resumo

Summary In his early novels, the Icelandic Nobel laureate Halldór Laxness portrayed troubled individuals beset by familial, societal and economic challenges within an unpredictable and often unforgiving landscape; his later work addressed humanistic concerns regarding a well-lived life and the harmony of individual and environment. His 1957 novel The Fish Can Sing lies at the cusp of these preoccupations. Laxness contrasts the economic privations experienced by hard-pressed Icelanders with the ostentatious displays of their Danish colonial overloads; he also portrays individuals afflicted by psychosis, alcohol use disorders and medically unexplained physical symptoms, and delineates the path towards a ‘celebrity’ suicide. The novel warns against self-deceptive vanity and community-endorsed illusions, and celebrates the persistent benefits of nurturing relationships, all within a lyric contemplation of individual adaptive resilience and quotidian domestic pleasures.

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