{"title":"”Hinner vi inte ta en grogg tillsammans, innan ångaren sjunker?”","authors":"Ulf Boëthius","doi":"10.14811/clr.v44.581","DOIUrl":null,"url":null,"abstract":"”How about a drink together, before the ship sinks?” Fact and Fiction in Erik Pallin’s Kaparkaptenen på Emden \nThe First World War gave rise to a surge of war novels, many of which were aimed at a young audience. These novels can be characterized as adventure stories with boys as their main target group. Swedish author Erik Pallin’s Kaparkaptenen på Emden: Romantiserad skildring från det stora världskriget 1914 (The Privateer Captain of Emden: Romanticized Depiction from the Great World War in 1914) was published in December 1914. It is not only one of the first Swedish youth novels about the war, but also one of the most intriguing as the tension between reality and fiction is particularly strong in Pallin’s novel. It tells the story of the German cruiser Emden whose raids in the Indian Ocean attracted much attention from journalists and authors. The article investigates how Pallin depicted the war for his young readers, focusing on the relationship between fact and fiction. The analysis shows that Pallin, much like the journalists reporting on Emden, transforms Emden’s warfare into heroic adventure tales and portrays Emden’s captain as a charismatic hero who symbolizes the male ideal of the time. The analysis concludes that Kaparkaptenen på Emden to some extent can be considered a “newsreel novel” (Paris), but that Pallin also romanticizes Emden’s warfare to appeal to his young readers. Rather than depicting the atrocities of real-life war, Pallin presents the war as an adventure with idyllic, romantic, and comical elements. The novel’s happy ending, with the war coming to an end, suggests that Pallin wished to take a stance against the war, but it can also be read as a strategy used to appeal to his young audience by offering them a story of hope.","PeriodicalId":52259,"journal":{"name":"Barnboken","volume":null,"pages":null},"PeriodicalIF":0.0000,"publicationDate":"2021-06-18","publicationTypes":"Journal Article","fieldsOfStudy":null,"isOpenAccess":false,"openAccessPdf":"","citationCount":"0","resultStr":null,"platform":"Semanticscholar","paperid":null,"PeriodicalName":"Barnboken","FirstCategoryId":"1085","ListUrlMain":"https://doi.org/10.14811/clr.v44.581","RegionNum":0,"RegionCategory":null,"ArticlePicture":[],"TitleCN":null,"AbstractTextCN":null,"PMCID":null,"EPubDate":"","PubModel":"","JCR":"Q2","JCRName":"Arts and Humanities","Score":null,"Total":0}
引用次数: 0
摘要
“在船沉没之前,我们一起喝一杯怎么样?”第一次世界大战掀起了战争小说的热潮,其中许多是针对年轻读者的。这些小说可以被描述为以男孩为主要目标群体的冒险故事。瑞典作家Erik Pallin的Kaparkaptenen pemden: Romantiserad skiling framatn det stora världskriget 1914 (Emden的私人船长:1914年世界大战的浪漫化描述)于1914年12月出版。它不仅是瑞典最早的关于战争的青年小说之一,也是最引人入胜的小说之一,因为帕林的小说中现实与虚构之间的张力特别强烈。它讲述了德国巡洋舰埃姆登号在印度洋的袭击事件,引起了记者和作家的广泛关注。这篇文章调查了帕林是如何为他的年轻读者描绘战争的,重点是事实与虚构之间的关系。分析表明,帕林与报道《埃姆登》的记者一样,将埃姆登的战争转变为英雄冒险故事,并将埃姆登的船长描绘成一个具有超凡魅力的英雄,象征着当时的男性理想。分析的结论是,在某种程度上可以认为是一部“新闻片小说”(《巴黎》),但帕林也将埃姆登的战争浪漫化,以吸引年轻读者。帕林没有描绘现实生活中战争的暴行,而是把战争描绘成一场充满田园诗般的、浪漫的和滑稽元素的冒险。随着战争的结束,小说的圆满结局表明,帕林希望采取反对战争的立场,但这也可以被解读为一种策略,通过给年轻读者提供一个充满希望的故事来吸引他们。
”Hinner vi inte ta en grogg tillsammans, innan ångaren sjunker?”
”How about a drink together, before the ship sinks?” Fact and Fiction in Erik Pallin’s Kaparkaptenen på Emden
The First World War gave rise to a surge of war novels, many of which were aimed at a young audience. These novels can be characterized as adventure stories with boys as their main target group. Swedish author Erik Pallin’s Kaparkaptenen på Emden: Romantiserad skildring från det stora världskriget 1914 (The Privateer Captain of Emden: Romanticized Depiction from the Great World War in 1914) was published in December 1914. It is not only one of the first Swedish youth novels about the war, but also one of the most intriguing as the tension between reality and fiction is particularly strong in Pallin’s novel. It tells the story of the German cruiser Emden whose raids in the Indian Ocean attracted much attention from journalists and authors. The article investigates how Pallin depicted the war for his young readers, focusing on the relationship between fact and fiction. The analysis shows that Pallin, much like the journalists reporting on Emden, transforms Emden’s warfare into heroic adventure tales and portrays Emden’s captain as a charismatic hero who symbolizes the male ideal of the time. The analysis concludes that Kaparkaptenen på Emden to some extent can be considered a “newsreel novel” (Paris), but that Pallin also romanticizes Emden’s warfare to appeal to his young readers. Rather than depicting the atrocities of real-life war, Pallin presents the war as an adventure with idyllic, romantic, and comical elements. The novel’s happy ending, with the war coming to an end, suggests that Pallin wished to take a stance against the war, but it can also be read as a strategy used to appeal to his young audience by offering them a story of hope.