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Gunvor Hofmo : ウィキペディア英語版
Gunvor Hofmo

Gunvor Hofmo (30 June 1921 – 17 October 1995) was a Norwegian writer, often considered one of Norway's most influential modernist poets.
==Literary career==

Hofmo started her literary career submitting poems for publication to a wide variety of presses, including the communist newspaper ''Friheten'' and weekly magazines such as ''Hjemmet''. One of her first published poems was dedicated to her close friend Ruth Maier and was published in ''Magasinet for Alle'', opening with the lines:
During the Holocaust, Maier was arrested, deported, and murdered in Auschwitz, and this became by all accounts the central tragedy in Hofmo's life. She was hospitalized in 1943 for depression, starting a lifelong struggle with mental illness.
Following the war, Hofmo traveled extensively and wrote essays for publication, primarily in the daily newspaper ''Dagbladet''. The topics included travel, Nordic poetry, and philosophical topics. Among her most noted contributions are a lengthy debate on the minimal daily cost of living a life barely out of penury in Paris and a treatise in defense of her poet colleague Olav Kaste.
In 1953, she stopped publishing essays and instead concentrated on her poetry. ''Dagbladet'' published seven of her poems between 1952 and 1956. She published five poetry collections between 1946 and 1955.
She was institutionalized at Gaustad Hospital, suffering from mental illness, characterized as schizophrenia, paranoid type, from 1955 to 1971, leading to what was known as her "16 years of silence." Following her discharge, she went into a period of considerable productivity, publishing fifteen poetry collections between 1971 and 1994. From 1977 to her death she never left her apartment in the Nordstrand section of Oslo.

抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)
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