Lögberg-Heimskringla - 28.01.1983, Blaðsíða 5

Lögberg-Heimskringla - 28.01.1983, Blaðsíða 5
WINNIPEG, FÖSTUDAGUR 28. JANÚAR 1983-5 Halldór Laxness at eighty Continued from page 4 tion for himself and his family in a distant land. For this dream he sacrifices everything, including his family, only to return, after much suffering, to his point of departure, having discovered that all his efforts have been in vain. In the end he accepts his predica- ment, thereby proving that his ex- perience has brought him maturity. Laxness found the subject matter for his novel in a remarkable autobiography from the last century, written by a farmer who went to Copenhagen to visit the King of Den- mark and Iceland, then journeyed to Utah and became a Mormon. But the author has refashioned the material almost beyond recognition. There are also tangential points of contact with Voltaire's Candide, which Laxness has translated into Icelandic. As always with this author, the characterization is at once clear and ambivalent: the characters are both simple and inexplicable. This is especially true of the protagonist, who is an idealist and a truth-seeker and yet ruthless enough to leave his family without any protection or means of subsistence while he pur- sues his goal. Human nature in all its complexities and contradictions is the mystical clue to this picaresque novel, but its most extraordinary facet is the language, with its shifting styles, its distant tone and its very concrete and palpable images. This is Laxness at his linguistically most accomplished. A Turn to the Stage Having reached the zenith of his narrative mastery, Laxness seemed to grow tired of his chosen literary form and turned to the theatre for a new mode of expression. During the next few years he wrote three original plays, which were staged in Reyk- javík. Previously he had written two rather indifferent plays, staged in 1934 and 1954, the latter of which was also produced in Helsinki and Moscow. All three of the later plays testify to the growing preoccupation of the author with those qualities in human nature and social conduct which make life meaningful and rewarding. Here the Taoist ideal of self-sufficiency reigns supreme. In the last of the plays, the Pigeon Ban- quet, staged in 1966, Laxness found his own theatrical voice and succeed- ed in dramatizing the main character, a simple, almost inane, clothes presser, who is anything but a dramatic character; he admits having been too stupid to learn the tailor’s trade. The style of the play is at once absurd, hilarious and strangely realistic-sarcastic, rich in queer episodes and cranky characters. The presser has his counterparts both in Laxness’s other plays and most of his novels, especially the later ones. He represents essentially one of two poles in all his creative output: the simple, innocent, self-sufficient in- dividual, who is entirely independent of his surroundings, society, fashion, public opinion, money and all the paraphernalia of the mundane world. There is a strong romantic element in the conception of this human type, but the amazing fact remains that Laxness has created many starkly real and vivid individuals of this kind — not at all "types" in the usual sense — each of whom stands for a clear and profound concept of the human situation; they represent the difficult art of living, of Being in the true sense. The other pole in Laxness’s writing is the ''man of the the world," the self-seeker, the practical en- trepreneur and administrator, the man of action. He is not always depicted in dark colors; he sometimes has in him a streak of resigned pessimism, sometimes good- humored altruism, but at the bottom he is contemptible because he is either insincere or morally blind; his actions are not inner-directed; he deludes himself, thinking he can gain life by playing according to the rules of a depraved world. In some in- stances he comes to a realization of his fallacy and "repents," but in most cases he is beyond redemption. Allegory and Myth In his first novel after his "theatrical interlude," Chrístianity at Glacier (1968), Laxness presented the two poles more vividly and succinct- ly thaii in any other of his works. In the characters of the Reverend Jón Primus and the millionaire- entrepreneur Godman Syngmann the author has given us the most fully developed incarnations of the two kinds of human beings, the consruc- tive and the destructive. Essentially Christianity at Glacier is a biblical allegory or existential myth, with constant illusions to Adam and Eve, Christ and Thomas a Kempis, St. Theresa and St. John of the Cross, to name a few of its many and widely different references. It is a very complex novel, with many levels of meaning and a highly in- tricate and intriguing structure. Its main theme is the world in all its ramifications versus stale and in- hibiting ideologies, which limit and impoverish human life. In its essence the novel is a myth about "paradise reclaimed," about the will to accept reality as it is and to live and survive in the face of threatened war and destruction. It is a unique work in contemporary Scandinavian literature. In A Country Chronicle (1970), a description of the valley near Reyk- javík where he grew up at a farm call- ed Laxnes (hence the pen-name), Laxnes produced a little gem of a parable about man's fidelity to himself and his kin. On one level it is a humorous account of the reac- tions of the queer and stubborn representatives of traditional Icelan- dic culture, when faced with new and unfamiliar developments, such as state authority and directives. There is a rich gallery of memorable eccentrics, but the basic theme is loyalty to custom, family, proven values. In God's Good Gifts (1972) Laxness uses a well-known entrepreneur as model for an endearing character, who has many excellent qualities but is an incurable dilettante in his private as well as his public life. The description of this confused and con- stantly active businessman, who has a formidable ability to exploit people and handle difficult situations with his excellent common sense, is com- bined with a scathingly satirical depiction of Iceland between 1920 and 1970, in which politicians, ideologues, labor unionists, businessmen and bankers are debunked and their daily world established as one of shallowness, stupidity and chance. Laxness shrewdly employs different literary styles to highlight his grotesque human comedy. In 1975-80 Laxness wrote four autobiographical novels covering his first twenty years. They give many vivid and informative glimpses into his childhood and youth. He has also written four col- lections of short stories where his narrative skill is everywhere in evidence. His volumes of essays and travel descriptions number nineteen to date. In addition to his five original plays, six of his major novels have been dramatized and staged. Beguiled by GreatIdeas During his career, Halldór Laxness has been able to mix, to an amazing extent, the contemplative life and that of the activist. His ideal is clear- ly the self-sufficient, inner-directed individual, who is indifferent to the world around him, but few Icelanders have been more engaged in the social and political struggles of the past half-century. This interesting paradox is part and parcel of the phenomenon which is Laxness. His strength has, in a sense, been his weakness. He has led a dynamic stor- my life and has been very impres- sionable; beguiled by great ideas, he has twice given himself to powerful ideologies — Catholicism and Marx- ism — and he has been a passionate and influential fighter for social justice. Although he has at once wrestled with the problems both of his art and his society, this battle on two fronts seems not to have wasted his energies but rather inspired and strengthened him. His artistic fertili- ty has been closely linked to his openness and curiosity about the world around him, his sensitivity to social injustice and his very keen, and often hurt, sense of beauty. Somewhere, Laxness has said that his writing was part of the struggle for a just society, which eventually would make writers like him superfluous. Similarly, he has delineated his human ideal in many memorable characters, knowing that they would probably not stand on his side in his political struggles. Such is the inconsistency of life and literature, even though they are so tightly intertwined, that one cannot easily be distinguished from the other in the lifework of Halldór Laxness. Courtesy of Icelandic Review Þjóðræknisfélag íslendinga í Vesturheimi FORSETI: JOHANN S. SIGURDSON I.undar, Manitoba ICELANDIC NATIONAL LEAGUE Support the League and its Chapters by joining: MEMBERSHIP: Individuals $3.00 Families $5.00 Mail your check to your local Chapter or Lilja Arnason, 1057 Dominion St., Winnipeg, Man. R3E 2P3 THORRABLOT — EDMONTON SATURDAY, FEB. 26, 1983 $15.00 per person CLUB MOCOMBO 200 St. Albert Road, St. Albert Social Hour 6-7 P.M. Supper & Guest Speaker 7-9 Dance 9 p.m. - 1 a.m. Tickets Available From: BRIAN SVEINBJORNSON 487-3329 (403) 7404-181 Edmonton T5T 2H1 AL ARNASON 455-7946 14434 McQueen Road, Edmonton, Alberta

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