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The Making of Daniel Braut

Garborg, ArneWells, Marie(Translated by)
Part of the Series B: English Translations of Works of Scandinavian Literature series
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Daniel Braut, the protagonist of Arne Garborg's ground-breaking 1883 novel, is an impressionable boy whose one ambition is to rise above the poverty of his farming background in western Norway.

Regarded by others as gifted, he sees education as the path to becoming part of the establishment.

However, his long struggle is not only hampered by his desperate poverty, his unrealistic dreams and his provincialism, but takes a terrible toll on his personality.

He is a mirror of his age, of a Norway slowly emerging from a predominantly peasant society into a modern urban culture, and of the religious, political and social upheavals of the late nineteenth century.

Marked by a puritanical childhood in Jaren, a district and a mindset from which he early distanced himself, Arne Garborg (1851-1924) was a writer who was left rootless and in conflict with himself, always searching.

His writing reflects his personal crises, but also the linguistic and intellectual development of a country struggling to free itself of foreign influence and religious bigotry, and assert its independence.

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Product Details
Norvik Press
187004181X / 9781870041812
Paperback / softback
28/02/2008
United Kingdom
256 pages
128 x 196 mm
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