Ficción
First published in 1890, Knut Hamsun's Hunger is a landmark of modernist fiction, tracing with hallucinatory precision the mental and physical disintegration of an impoverished writer wandering Kristiania. Rather than a conventional social novel, it offers an interior drama shaped by abrupt shifts in consciousness, irony, delirium, and startling lyric intensity. Hamsun rejects nineteenth-century realism's outward explanatory method in favor of psychological immediacy, making the novel a decisive precursor to later stream-of-consciousness writing and an enduring study of pride, deprivation, and artistic obsession. Hamsun drew on his own years of poverty, instability, and literary ambition when composing the novel, and that biographical proximity gives Hunger its extraordinary authority. Born in 1859 in rural Norway, he worked a series of precarious jobs before gaining recognition as a writer, experiences that sharpened his sensitivity to humiliation, isolation, and the fragile dignity of the outsider. The book emerges from this intimate knowledge of hardship while also announcing Hamsun's revolt against the dominant naturalist aesthetics of his time. Hunger is especially recommended to readers interested in the origins of literary modernism, the representation of consciousness, and the uneasy relation between art and suffering. Difficult, unsettling, and brilliantly inventive, it remains one of the essential European novels.
© 2026 Good Press (Libro electrónico): 8596547910336
Traductores: George Egerton
Fecha de lanzamiento
Libro electrónico: 29 de junio de 2026
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