Et hvidkalket, gudsforladt lys: Inger Christensens alfabet og katastrofen

Research output: Contribution to journalJournal articleResearchpeer-review

Standard

Et hvidkalket, gudsforladt lys : Inger Christensens alfabet og katastrofen . / Holm, Isak Winkel.

In: European Journal of Scandinavian Studies, Vol. 46, No. 1, 06.2016, p. 137–156.

Research output: Contribution to journalJournal articleResearchpeer-review

Harvard

Holm, IW 2016, 'Et hvidkalket, gudsforladt lys: Inger Christensens alfabet og katastrofen ', European Journal of Scandinavian Studies, vol. 46, no. 1, pp. 137–156.

APA

Holm, I. W. (2016). Et hvidkalket, gudsforladt lys: Inger Christensens alfabet og katastrofen . European Journal of Scandinavian Studies, 46(1), 137–156.

Vancouver

Holm IW. Et hvidkalket, gudsforladt lys: Inger Christensens alfabet og katastrofen . European Journal of Scandinavian Studies. 2016 Jun;46(1):137–156.

Author

Holm, Isak Winkel. / Et hvidkalket, gudsforladt lys : Inger Christensens alfabet og katastrofen . In: European Journal of Scandinavian Studies. 2016 ; Vol. 46, No. 1. pp. 137–156.

Bibtex

@article{133d0f3f3005494c984d78d81e17aa15,
title = "Et hvidkalket, gudsforladt lys: Inger Christensens alfabet og katastrofen ",
abstract = "Samme artikel som i Spring nr. 37 (2015)The poetic voice in the Danish poet Inger Christensen's book of poems alphabet from 1981 is a prophetic voice. Since the Old Testament prophets, the prophetic voice has been characterized by a 'retroprospective' temporal structure: it jumps forward to a future disaster and backward from the fictional future to the present political facts. In Inger Christensen's words, the prophetic voice talks about a world bathed in the whitewashed, godforsaken light of impending disaster. This article suggests that an analysis of the prophetic voice in alphabet opens up a possibility to address the relationship between poetry and nuclear war and, in more general terms, between art and disaster.",
keywords = "Det Humanistiske Fakultet, Inger Christensen, profeti, katastrofefiktion, Kold Krigsforskning",
author = "Holm, {Isak Winkel}",
note = "samme artikel som i Spring nr. 37",
year = "2016",
month = jun,
language = "Dansk",
volume = "46",
pages = "137–156",
journal = "European Journal of Scandinavian Studies",
issn = "2191-9399",
publisher = "De Gruyter",
number = "1",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Et hvidkalket, gudsforladt lys

T2 - Inger Christensens alfabet og katastrofen

AU - Holm, Isak Winkel

N1 - samme artikel som i Spring nr. 37

PY - 2016/6

Y1 - 2016/6

N2 - Samme artikel som i Spring nr. 37 (2015)The poetic voice in the Danish poet Inger Christensen's book of poems alphabet from 1981 is a prophetic voice. Since the Old Testament prophets, the prophetic voice has been characterized by a 'retroprospective' temporal structure: it jumps forward to a future disaster and backward from the fictional future to the present political facts. In Inger Christensen's words, the prophetic voice talks about a world bathed in the whitewashed, godforsaken light of impending disaster. This article suggests that an analysis of the prophetic voice in alphabet opens up a possibility to address the relationship between poetry and nuclear war and, in more general terms, between art and disaster.

AB - Samme artikel som i Spring nr. 37 (2015)The poetic voice in the Danish poet Inger Christensen's book of poems alphabet from 1981 is a prophetic voice. Since the Old Testament prophets, the prophetic voice has been characterized by a 'retroprospective' temporal structure: it jumps forward to a future disaster and backward from the fictional future to the present political facts. In Inger Christensen's words, the prophetic voice talks about a world bathed in the whitewashed, godforsaken light of impending disaster. This article suggests that an analysis of the prophetic voice in alphabet opens up a possibility to address the relationship between poetry and nuclear war and, in more general terms, between art and disaster.

KW - Det Humanistiske Fakultet

KW - Inger Christensen

KW - profeti

KW - katastrofefiktion

KW - Kold Krigsforskning

M3 - Tidsskriftartikel

VL - 46

SP - 137

EP - 156

JO - European Journal of Scandinavian Studies

JF - European Journal of Scandinavian Studies

SN - 2191-9399

IS - 1

ER -

ID: 140452551