Ögats poetik. Om Gunnar Ekelöfs "sent på jorden" och Erik Lindegrens "mannen utan väg"
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2024-12-17
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Abstract
How does a motif gain and produce significance in a work of poetry? This question provides the setting for the
following essay, which examines the eye and its surrounding motifs in two Swedish modernist classics: Gunnar
Ekelöf's "sent på jorden" (1932) and Erik Lindegren's "mannen utan väg" (1942). Close readings of both works are
followed by a comparative analysis, in which the similarities and differences between the works are discussed.
The joint basis of Ekelöf's and Lindegren's poetry is the problem of seeing – a problem poeticised through the
highly frequent occurrences of phenomena and notions such as eyes, mirrors and blindness. These motifs are
fundamental in creating coherence and unity in each of the two poetry collections. While comparisons between
them have been drawn before, this essay argues that the centrality of the eye and its surrounding motifs should be
considered as possibly their greatest cause of kinship. Yet both works are their own self-enclosed poetic
achievements. In "sent på jorden" the eye and its surrounding motifs correspond with the theme of time as well as
anguish and death, whereas Lindegren in "mannen utan väg" applies the eyes and the mirrors as epistemological
obstacles, using Narcissus as a symbol for mankind. The problem of seeing is depicted by Ekelöf as the problem
of the individual, striving for blindness, whereas Lindegren's poems make it a universal matter, seeking to
transcend the blindness of seeing. These differences, however, exist within the framework of a shared discourse:
the poetics of the eye.
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Gunnar Ekelöf, sent på jorden, Erik Lindegren, mannen utan väg, seende, blindhet, komparativ motivstudie, motivkomplex, korrespondens