Árni Bergmann Explained
Árni Jóhannsson Bergmann[1] (born 22 August 1935) is an Icelandic writer, newspaper editor, literary critic, and translator of Russian literary works.
Career
Bergmann studied Russian at Moscow State University and received his Master of Arts from the institution in 1962. Shortly thereafter, he joined the staff of the Socialist-leaning Icelandic newspaper Þjóðviljinn as a journalist and columnist.[2] He became the paper’s foremost literary critic and served as editor-in-chief during 1978 to 1992.[3]
In addition to his work with Þjóðviljinn, Bergmann taught classes in literature, literary history, and various topics in Russian literature and language at the University of Iceland from 1973 until 2004.
He is best known for his third novel, Þorvaldur víðförli: Skáldsaga ('Thorvald Widely-Travelled: A Novel'), a fictionalized account of the life of tenth century Icelandic skald and missionary Þorvaldur víðförli, which was published in 1994. The novel earned him nomination for the Icelandic Literary Prize in 1994 and the Nordic Council Literature Prize in 1998. In 2015, he published a Russian translation of Þorvaldur víðförli
One of Iceland’s most prolific literary translators, he has translated a broad variety of works from Russian to Icelandic. Most of his translations are focused on works from the late nineteenth and first half of the twentieth century and include, for example, novels by Nina Berberova and Valentin Katayev; short stories by Anton Chekhov, Nikolai Gogol, Daniil Kharms, and Mikhail Sholokhov; poems by Osip Mandelstam, Vladimir Mayakovsky, and Boris Pasternak; and essays by Ilya Ehrenburg and Viktor Shklovsky, among many others.
Personal life
Bergmann was born in Keflavík, an Icelandic town southwest of Reykjavík, on 22 August 1935 to Jóhann Stefánsson Bergmann (1906–1996), a fisherman and driver, and Halldóra Árnadóttir (1914–2006), a housewife. He is the second eldest of four brothers, the others being Hörður, born in 1933; Stefán, born in 1942; and Jóhann, born in 1946.
His wife was Lena Bergmann (1935–2008), born Elena Rytsjardovna Túvína in Ryazan, Russian SFSR, Soviet Union, the eldest child of Soffía, a dentist, and Ryszard Tuwim, an engineer. Lena and Árni met while both were studying Russian at the Moscow State University and were married in the fall of 1958. Their first child, Snorri, was born in 1961, when they were still living in Moscow. The young family moved to Iceland in 1962. Their second child, Olga Soffía, was born in 1967. Together, Árni and Lena wrote Blátt og rautt: bernska og unglingsár í tveim heimum ('Blue and Red: Childhood and Adolescence in Two Worlds'), contrasting their experiences growing up in Iceland and the Soviet Union, respectively.[4]
Bergmann has never taken a drivers test and bicycling has been his primary means of transportation since returning to Iceland form Russia in 1962.[5]
Bibliography
This list of works written and/or translated by Árni Jóhannsson Bergmann is incomplete.
Fiction
Bergman has written four novels and two children’s books.[6]
Novels
- Geirfuglarnir ('The Great Auks') – 1982
- Með kveðju frá Dublin ('With Greetings from Dublin') – 1984
- Þorvaldur víðförli ('Thorvald the Widely-Travelled') – 1994
- Sægreifi deyr ('Death of a Sea-Baron') – 1999
Children’s books
- Stelpan sem var hrædd við dýr ('The Girl Who Was Afraid of Animals') – 1994, with illustrations by Olga Bergmann
- Óskastundir: saga handa börnum ('Wishing Hours: A Tale for Children') – 1997, with illustrations by Margrét Laxness
Non-fiction
Memoirs
- Miðvikudagar í Moskvu ('Wednesdays in Moscow') – 1979
- Blátt og rautt: bernska og unglingsár í tveim heimum ('Blue and Red: Childhood and Adolescence in Two Worlds') – 1986, with Lena Bergmann
- ('I Still Have One Thing: Memories') – 2015
Scholarly works
- Listin að lesa ('The Art of Reading') – 2005
- Glíman við Guð ('Wresting with God') – 2008
Translations to Icelandic
Novels
Plays
Short stories
- (1987) – "Shibalok's Seed" from Tales from the Don by Mikhail Sholokhov
- ('Poems Heard in the 20th Century') (1987) – by Andrei Bitov
- (1994) – "About Love" by Anton Chekhov
- (1994) – "The Lottery Ticket” by Anton Chekhov
- (1998) – "The Lady with the Dog" and other short stories by Anton Chekhov
- ('Daniil Kharms: Smell of Burnt Feathers') (2000) – selected short stories by Daniil Kharms, published as a special edition of the literary journal Bjartur og frú Emilía
- Mírgorod (2006) by Nikolai Gogol, translated by Árni Bergmann, Áslaug Agnarsdóttir, and Þórarinn Kristjánsson
Other
-
- ('Café Rotonde: Chapters from the first book of memoirs') (1961) – selections from the memoirs of Ilya Ehrenburg
- (1961) – selected passages from People, Years, Life by Ilya Ehrenburg
- ('[Untitled]') (1987) – poem by Osip Mandelstam
- ('Russia and Iceland: The Relationship Between Orthodoxy and Lutheranism through History') (1988) – essay by Ágústin Niktin, published in, the magazine of the Church of Iceland
- (1991) – essay 'Art as Device' by Viktor Shklovsky, published in ('Steps in 20th Century Literature'), a collection of ten translated essays from various landmark writers of the late 19th and early 20th century
- (1994) – by Anton Chekhov
- (1997) – translation of the epic poem The Tale of Igor's Campaign from Old East Slavic and accompanying text drawing parallels between 'Russian epic poetry and Icelandic ancient literature'
- ('Russian Futurism') (2001) – collected manifestos of Russian Futurists
See also
External links
Notes and References
- Web site: 2003. 05.00.26 Slavneskar bókmenntir. live. 2021-05-15. University of Iceland. https://web.archive.org/web/20210518020815/https://ugla.hi.is/kennsluskra/?tab=nam&chapter=namskeid&id=05002620036 . 18 May 2021 .
- Web site: 2015-08-22. Ævistarf í heimi bóka. live. 2021-05-15. Morgunblaðið. is. https://web.archive.org/web/20210518023822/https://www.mbl.is/greinasafn/grein/1565038/ . 18 May 2021 .
- Web site: 2014-04-15. Árni Bergmann – Biography. live. 2021-05-17. City of Literature – Reykjavík. en. https://web.archive.org/web/20210418224831/https://www.cityofliterature.is/en/literature-web/author/arni-bergmann . 18 April 2021 .
- Web site: 2008-06-19. Lena Bergmann. live. 2021-05-18. Morgunblaðið. is. https://web.archive.org/web/20160518025452/http://www.mbl.is:80/greinasafn/grein/1223133/ . 18 May 2016 .
- Web site: 2020-11-07. Farskjóta stolið frá frægum hjólamanni. live. 2021-05-16. Morgunblaðið. is. https://web.archive.org/web/20201108024341/https://www.mbl.is/frettir/innlent/2020/11/07/farskjota_stolid_fra_fraegum_hjolamanni/ . 8 November 2020 .
- Web site: Sigurðsson. Björn. 2003. Translated by Dagur Gunnarsson (15 April 2014). Árni Bergmann – About the author. live. 2021-05-17. City of Literature – Reykjavík. en. https://web.archive.org/web/20210418224831/https://www.cityofliterature.is/en/literature-web/author/arni-bergmann . 18 April 2021 .
- Web site: 1996-03-07. Sjálfsmorðinginn á Herranótt. live. 2021-06-03. Morgunblaðið. is. https://web.archive.org/web/20200923160225/https://www.mbl.is/greinasafn/grein/253411/ . 23 September 2020 .