Anna Munch Explained

Occupation:Novelist and dramatist
Birth Date:4 August 1856
Relatives:Cecilie Dahl (sister)
Alma Mater:Nissens Pigeskole
Spouse:
  • Peter Anker Ragnvald Munch (m. 1883)
  • Sigurd Mathiesen (m. 1910)
Children:1
Death Place:Oslo, Norway
Birth Place:Christiania, Norway
Birth Name:Anna Dahl

Anna Munch née Dahl (4 August 1856 – 29 November 1932) was a Norwegian novelist and dramatist whose works address conflicts between the sexes, frequently based on her own experience of marriage and divorce. After a difficult relationship with her first husband Peter Munch, she met the much younger writer Sigurd Mathiesen whom she later married. Her early novel Kvinder. Et Stykke Udviklingshistorie. Kristiania-fortælling (Women. A Piece on Development History. Christiania Tale, 1892) is about women artists. Her principal work, the novel Glæde (Joy, 1904), presents a sensitive description of the utopian world of childhood.[1] [2] [3]

Early life and education

Born on 4 August 1856 in the Vestre Aker (now a district of Oslo), Munch was the daughter of the physician Ludvig Vilhelm Dahl (1826–90) and his wife Anna Cathrine Lyders née Bonnevie (1835–93). She was the first of the family's 11 children, who included the artists Cecilie Dahl (1858–1943), Nils Alstrup Dahl (1876–1940), and Ingerid Dahl (1861–1944).[4] She was raised in Christiania and Trondheim and experienced a difficult childhood subject to her father's view that women were less skilled than men.

Munch completed her education at Nissens Pigeskole.

Career

After leaving her first husband in the 1890s, Munch devoted herself to writing.

In her first novel, To mennesker (Two People, 1898), Munch describes her passionate love for the writer Knut Hamsun.[2] Her second, Kvinder (1989), covers the contrasts for women between marriage and free love and presents the pleasures of the Bohemian way of life. Her later writing evokes contradictions between erotic love and platonic relationships which provide for lasting companionship. The theme is also central to her play Psyche (1893).[3] [5] Her most successful work, Glæde (1910), is a semi-autobiographical novel describing the experiences of Ester's now lost utopian childhood as she suffers the ordeals of later life.[5]

Personal life

In 1883, Munch married Peter Anker Ragnvald Munch, an officer and teacher, with whom she had a daughter Signe.[6] Due to his poor treatment of her, including refusing to provide her with paper on which she could write, she referred to him as a tyrant. She dissolved the marriage in the 1890s.

In 1910, she married the writer Sigurd Mathiesen (1871–1958). After coping with difficult tines in Stavern, a small town in Norway, the couple moved to Denmark.Though the couple initially enjoyed a happy relationship, they slowly lost interest in each other.

Munch died in Oslo on 29 November 1932.

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Anna Munch. Nordic Women's Literature. 3 July 2023. 3 July 2023. https://web.archive.org/web/20230703133814/https://nordicwomensliterature.net/writers/munch-anna/. live.
  2. Web site: Anna Munch. Store Norske Leksikon. Bjerck Hagen, Erik. 3 July 2023. no. 27 March 2023. https://web.archive.org/web/20230327094635/https://snl.no/Anna_Munch. live.
  3. Web site: Anna Munch. Norsk Biografisk Leksikon. Aasen, Elisabeth. 3 July 2023. no. 10 July 2018. https://web.archive.org/web/20180710164910/https://nbl.snl.no/Anna_Munch. live.
  4. Web site: Anna Dahl Munch, f. Dahl . Historisk befolkningsregister. 3 July 2023 . no.
  5. Web site: The Bohemian as Woman. Nordic Women's Literature. Rønning, Anne Brigitte. 16 December 2011. 4 July 2023. 4 July 2023. https://web.archive.org/web/20230704085754/https://nordicwomensliterature.net/2011/12/16/the-bohemian-as-woman/. live.
  6. Web site: Peter Anker Ragnvald Munch . 3 July 2023 . Historisk befolkningsregister . no.