| Bjørnson, Bjørnstjerne Martinus | 1832 - 1910 |
| Dramatist, author, poet, prominent Norwegian patriot | Liberal |
Bjørnson finished Upper Secondary School in 1852 and
then became a journalist. He wrote literary reviews and short
stories. In 1857 he made his literary debut with the peasant tale
Synnøve Solbakken. He was instructor and artistic
leader at the Norwegian Theater in Bergen 1857-1859. At that time
he also started working as an editor and politician. He was
co-editor of Aftenposten in Kristiania (Oslo) 1859-1860,
but then he went abroad. Bjørnson became one of the
greatest Norwegian poets with an international reputation. In
1903 he was awarded the Nobel Prize
in Literature.
Politically, Bjørnson was a radical, liberal intellectual.
With voice and pen, he defended nationalism, liberalism and
progress. His political activity reached a peak in the 1880s,
when Norwegian liberals were struggling for a parliamentary
system and increased autonomy within the Swedish-Norwegian union.
At that time, however, he also became a strong proponent of the
cause of peace, and believed that Norway could play an important
role in its progress. While being in favour of increased autonomy
for his own country, he got opposed to nationalist policies that
might lead to war. In the mid-1890s there was a crisis in the
Swedish-Norwegian relationship. Bjørnson then became
unpopular for demanding that the crisis be liquidated by
arbitration. He got unpopular both in Norway and Sweden when he
suggested that Russia should be given rights of transit across
northern Norway to the Atlantic. (Russia wanted access to icefree
harbours). Why, he asked, should "a line on the map" put an end
to "that love of neighbour to which we are everywhere obligated"?
By contemporary standards, Bjørnson's engagement for peace
was broad. He supported Emile Zola in the Dreyfus affair, and
generally got engaged in the struggle against persecution and
oppression of individuals and minority groups. He was concerned
with the social problems of his time, and demanded universal
suffrage. He also came to see himself as a socialist, but hoped
for the class struggle to be peacefully resolved.
Bjørnstjerne Bjørnson was the most famous member of
the Nobel Committee of the Norwegian Storting 1897-1906.
Sources
MLA style: "Nobelprize.org". Nobelprize.org. 26 May 2013 http://www.nobelprize.org/nobel_prizes/peace/articles/committee/nnclist/bios/bjornson.html
