• Source: Agnes von Krusenstjerna
  • Agnes von Krusenstjerna (October 9, 1894 – March 10, 1940) was a Swedish writer and noble. She was a controversial writer whose books challenged the moral standards of the day and was the center of a great literary controversy of the freedom of speech.


    Biography


    Krusenstjerna was born in Växjö and brought up in Gävle. Niece of Edvard von Krusenstjerna, she was born in to the nobility. She was educated at the teacher's academy of Anna Sandström in Stockholm. She married David Sprengel in 1921.
    Agnes von Krusenstjerna was on several occasions admitted to mental hospitals. In 1940, she was diagnosed with a brain tumour; she died on the operating table in March 1940. Krusenstjerna died in Stockholm.


    = Works

    =

    She debuted as a writer with the girls' novel Ninas dagbok (1917) and made her breakthrough with the Tony novel series (1922–26) about a girl's development in a noble environment.
    The Tony series was greatly controversial, as it depicted sexual themes as well as mental disorders, which made Krusenstjerna controversial. Sexuality was, before the 1920s, not mentioned in novels, and her books depicted sex and intercourse. The novel series Fröknarna von Pahlen created one of the greatest debates and controversies of its time in Sweden, known as Krusenstjernafejden (The Krusenstjerna feud): the series described sexual intercourse, which caused an enormous amount of attention and led to a two-year-long (1933–35) debate about the freedom of speech, the relation of literature toward the moral standards, the right of female expression and the right to sexual freedom, which ended with the writers' conference of Sigtuna 1935. She was supported by Eyvind Johnson, Johannes Edfelt, Elmer Diktonius and Karin Boye, who compared the affair to the censorship of Nazi Germany.
    Her writing was closely inspired to her own life and can be regarded as partially autobiographical, especially her last, unfinished series, Fattigadel (Poor Nobility) (1935–1938).


    Works


    Novels

    Ninas dagbok (Nina's diary) 1917
    Helenas första kärlek (The first love of Helena) 1918
    Fru Esters pensionat (Mrs Ester's boarding house) 1927
    Händelser på vägen (Events on the way) 1929
    Series
    The Tony series:

    Tony växer upp (Tony's adolescence) 1922
    Tonys läroår (Tony's years of learning) 1924
    Tonys sista läroår (Tony's last years of learning) 1926
    The Miss von Pahlen's series:
    Fröknarna von Pahlen:

    Den blå rullgardinen (The blue curtain) 1930
    Kvinnogatan (The Women's street) 1930
    Höstens skuggor (The shadows of the autumn) 1931
    Porten vid Johannes (The gate at Johannes) 1933
    Älskande par (Loving couples) 1933
    Bröllop på Ekered (Wedding at Ekered) 1935
    Av samma blod (By the same blood) 1935
    Fattigadel (Poor nobility) original title: Viveca von Lagercronas historia (The story of Viveca von Lagercrona):

    Fattigadel (Pauper nobility) 1935
    Dunklet mellan träden (The shadow between the trees) 1936
    Dessa lyckliga år (These happy years) 1937
    I livets vår (In the spring of life) 1938
    Poems

    Nunnornas hus (The house of nuns) 1937
    Short stories

    En dagdriverskas anteckningar (The notes of an idle woman) (1923)
    Delat rum på Kammakaregatan (A shared room at Kammakaregatan) (1933)
    En ung dam far till Djurgårdsbrunn (A young lady visits Djurgårdsbrunn) (1933)
    Vivi, flicka med melodi ( Vivi, a girl with a melody) (1936)
    Stulet nyår (A stolen New Year's Eve)


    Fiction


    Her life was portrayed in Amorosa (1986 film).


    See also


    Alfhild Agrell
    Frida Stéenhoff


    References


    Olof Lagercrantz: Agnes von Krusenstjerna, 1980 (delvis omarbetad från originalutgåvan 1951)
    Merete Mazzarella: Agnes von Krusenstjerna, 1992
    Börje Teijler: Agnes von Krusenstjerna och David Sprengel, 1977
    Anna Williams: Tillträde until den nya tiden: fem berättelser om när Sverige blev modernt: Ivar Lo-Johansson, Agnes von Krusenstjerna, Vilhelm Moberg, Moa Martinson, 2002
    Anders Öhman: Apologier: en linje i den svenska romanen från August Strindberg until Agnes von Krusenstjerna, 2001
    Lagercrantz 1951, Agnes von Krusenstjerna; Johannes Edfelts efterord until I livets vår i Krusenstjernas samlade skrifter


    Further reading


    Agnes von Krusenstjerna at Svenskt kvinnobiografiskt lexikon


    External links


    Agnes von Krusenstjerna – via Project Runeberg.
    Image
    Bibliography Archived 2012-02-04 at the Wayback Machine

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