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                <title><name key="bunch_mads" reg="Bunch, Mads">Mads Bunch</name>.
                    <title level="m">Isak Dinesen Reading Søren Kierkegaard: On Christianity, Seduction, Gender, and Repetition</title>.
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              <author><name key="allen_julie_k" reg="Allen, Julie K.">Julie K. Allen</name>
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                    <name key="holmes_martin" reg="Holmes, Martin">Martin Holmes</name>
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                    Marked up to be included in the Scandinavian-Canadian Studies Journal
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                  <name key="bunch_mads" reg="Bunch, Mads">Mads Bunch</name>.
                  <title level="m">Isak Dinesen Reading Søren Kierkegaard: On Christianity, Seduction, Gender, and Repetition</title>
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              <author><name key="allen_julie_k" reg="Allen, Julie K.">Julie K. Allen</name></author>
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                            Scandinavian-Canadian Studies Journal / Études scandinaves au Canada
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                        <imprint><biblScope type="vol">27</biblScope>
                            <biblScope type="start-page">191</biblScope>
                            <biblScope type="end-page">194</biblScope>
                            <date value="2018">2018</date>
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                <keywords><list>
                    <item>Søren Kierkegaard</item>
                    <item>Isak Dinesen</item>
                    <item>Karen Blixen</item>
                    <item>influence</item>
                    <item>pseudonyms</item>
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            <item n="1">MDH: Deleted comma per editor. <date value="2020-06-22">22nd June 2020</date></item>
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                MDH: entered editor's proofing corrections 
                <date value="2020-06-22">22nd June 2020</date>
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                MDH: entered general editor's proofing corrections
                <date value="2018-12-03">3rd December 2018</date>
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                MDH: entered author's proofing corrections
                <date value="2018-02-02">2nd February 2018</date>
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            MDH: started markup 
            <date value="2018-02-02">2nd February 2018</date>
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    <text><front><docTitle n="Isak Dinesen Reading Søren Kierkegaard: On Christianity, Seduction, Gender, and Repetition">
                <titlePart type="Main">
                    <name key="bunch_mads" reg="Bunch, Mads">Mads Bunch</name>.
                  <title level="m">Isak Dinesen Reading Søren Kierkegaard: On Christianity, Seduction, Gender, and Repetition</title>.
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                <titlePart type="ReviewedBook">
                    <listBibl>
                        <bibl>
                            <editor><name key="bunch_mads" reg="Bunch, Mads">Mads Bunch</name>.</editor>
                            <date value="2017">2017</date>.
                            <title level="m">Isak Dinesen Reading Søren Kierkegaard: On Christianity, Seduction, Gender, and Repetition</title>. 
                            <pubPlace>Cambridge</pubPlace>: <publisher>Legenda</publisher>. 
                            <biblScope type="pages">Xiii + 183 pages</biblScope>.
                            <note type="ISBN">ISBN: 978-1-78188-493-5.</note>
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        <docAuthor><name key="allen_julie_k" reg="Allen, Julie K.">Julie K. Allen</name> is Professor of Comparative Arts and Letters at Brigham Young University in Provo, Utah. Her primary research interests deal with national and cultural identity, primarily in Germany and Denmark, as conveyed through film, literature, and popular culture. She is the author of <title level="m">Icons of Danish Modernity: Georg Brandes and Asta Nielsen</title> (2010) and <title level="m">Danish but not Lutheran: The Impact of Mormonism on Danish Cultural Identity, 1850-1920</title> (2017), the editor of <title level="m">More than Just Fairy Tales: New Approaches to the Stories of Hans Christian Andersen</title> (2014), and the co-translator of <title level="m">The Annotated Hans Christian Andersen</title> (Norton, 2007).
      <!--E-mail: <xptr to="blah@blah" type="email"/>.-->
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        <titlePart type="short_affil">Brigham Young University</titlePart>
        </front>
    <body><div0>
        
        <p>Writing about two of the most internationally recognized, prolific Danish authors is a challenging task under any circumstances, but it becomes exponentially more difficult when both of the authors in question are known for their works’ resistance to direct interpretation. Both Karen Blixen (1885-1962) and Søren Kierkegaard (1813-1855), who feature in Mads Bunch’s new book <title level="m">Isak Dinesen Reading Søren Kierkegaard</title>, used various narrative strategies—from authorial pseudonyms to irony to linguistic games—to complicate straightforward readings of their narratives. In addition, the gender, ideological, and temporal divides between them—Blixen was born almost thirty years after Kierkegaard’s death—carry with them all manner of cultural, social, and geopolitical differences that affect the ways both authors engaged with the world around them. Putting these authors into dialogue with each other would require taking all of these complicating factors into account, which would also result in a much longer book than most readers would be willing to slog through. Instead of trying to give Kierkegaard and Blixen equal space within a fully articulated sociohistorical context, therefore, Bunch opts for a narrower and more manageable focus: Blixen’s explicit and implicit engagement with ideas and themes from Kierkegaard’s first authorship in her own works. </p>
        
        <p>Given the self-conscious elusiveness of the narratives he is dealing with, Bunch is wisely careful about outlining the parameters of his study: identifying his primary sources, clarifying the reasons for his exclusive use of Blixen’s pen name throughout the book, noting the relationship between this book and his own previous work on the subject, and distancing himself from Blixen’s often very simplistic views of Kierkegaard. He also stays very close to his main goal, which is <cit><q>to uncover how Dinesen in her tales interprets, critiques and subverts major ideas, characters and plots from Kierkegaard’s aesthetic-pseudonymous authorship (1843-46)</q> <bibl>5</bibl></cit>. Despite its title, the book is less concerned with Blixen’s reading of Kierkegaard’s actual writings than with her literary subversions of the social norms his texts seem to support. For readers looking for a reflective treatment of both authors’ approaches to the subjects Bunch flags in the subtitle, <title level="m">On Christianity, Seduction, Gender, and Repetition</title>, Blixen’s reductionist treatment of Kierkegaard’s complex authorship, in particular her conflation of Kierkegaard himself with all of his pseudonymous personas, and the book’s generally uncritical reproduction of Blixen’s biases about Christianity come as something of a disappointment, particularly in light of Kierkegaard’s critical relationship with religion. In many ways, Kierkegaard appears in Blixen’s work as a caricature of himself; Bunch admits: <cit><q>One could even say that Dinesen at times is reading Kierkegaard … like the Devil reading the Bible</q> <bibl>5</bibl></cit>. Nevertheless, Bunch does an excellent job of pursuing his stated goal of exploring, à la Harold Bloom, how Blixen deliberately misreads Kierkegaard in <cit><q>an act of creative correction that is actually and necessarily a misinterpretation</q> <bibl>qtd. in Bunch 5</bibl></cit>. Bunch shows clearly how Blixen, in the tradition of a Western <cit><q>history of anxiety and self-saving caricature, of distortion, of perverse, willful revisionism,</q></cit> extracts certain <soCalled>Christian-Bourgeois</soCalled> motifs, characters, and themes from Kierkegaard’s early works with the intent of rewriting, subverting, and refuting them. At the same time, she seems to agree with and even appropriate some aspects of Kierkegaard’s depiction of the aesthetic, to the extent of reclaiming the term <soCalled>aesthete</soCalled> as a positive, even heroic designation.</p>
        
        <p>Bunch divides his analysis into five main sections, each with several sub-chapters. In <title level="a">Part I: Dinesen and Kierkegaard,</title> he uses Blixen’s correspondence with friends, contemporaries, and family members to document her earliest encounters with Kierkegaard’s works in the 1920s and the gradual evolution of her critical view of Kierkegaard, especially his endorsement of Christian inwardness as the highest expression of individuality. As Bunch notes, she shared this opinion with the Danish literary critic Georg Brandes, whom she admired greatly and whose own deliberate misreading of Kierkegaard has been highly influential on the latter’s international reception. In <title level="a">Part II: Christianity,</title> Bunch explores Blixen’s rejection of Kierkegaard’s Christian philosophy, particularly as articulated in his 1843 text <title level="m">Frygt og bæven</title> <gloss><title level="m">Fear and Trembling</title></gloss> attributed to Johannes de silentio, and <title level="m">Begrebet Angest</title> <gloss><title level="m">The Concept of Anxiety</title></gloss> from 1844, published under the pseudonym Viligius Haufniensis. In this section, Bunch focuses on Blixen’s early marionette comedy <title level="m">Sandhedens Hævn</title> (1926) and her short story <title level="a">The Pearls</title> (1942), showing how Blixen’s rejection of a Christian God underlies her endorsement of the aesthetic views put forth in the first part of Kierkegaard’s <title level="m">Enten—Eller</title> <gloss><title level="m">Either/Or</title></gloss> from 1843. </p>
        
        <p>Bunch explores in greater detail the connections and disconnections between Blixen’s feminism and Kierkegaard’s negatively laden aestheticism in the next two sections. <title level="a">Part III: Seduction</title> juxtaposes Blixen’s stories <title level="a">Carnival</title> and <title level="a">Ehrengard</title> with Kierkegaard’s notorious seducer characters Johannes and Don Juan. In these stories, Bunch argues, Blixen dismisses the notion of seduction as an anachronism in an age of sexual liberation but also offers two models of female seducers as counterparts to Kierkegaard’s characters. <title level="a">Part IV: Gender</title> considers Blixen’s engagement with the characters in the sketch <title level="a">In Vino Veritas</title> attributed to William Afham <gloss>Byhim</gloss> from <title level="m">Stadier på Livets Vej</title> <gloss><title level="m">Stages on Life’s Way</title></gloss>, which appeared in 1845 under the pseudonym Hilarius Bogbinder <gloss>Bookbinder</gloss>, and with Judge Wilhelm in the second part of <title level="m">Either/Or.</title> In his close readings of Blixen’s texts, Bunch posits Blixen’s substitution of <title level="a">God with Woman</title> in an attempt to subvert <cit><q>nineteenth-century gender roles, where man is seen as primary and woman as the weaker sex, described in Kierkegaard’s terminology as man being equal to ‘Mennesket’ (a human being) whereas woman is reduced to ‘being-for-other’</q> <bibl>126</bibl></cit>. In the final section of the book, <title level="a">Part V: Repetition,</title> Bunch reads Blixen’s stories <title level="a">The Poet</title> and <title level="a">Babette’s Feast</title> in opposition to Kierkegaard’s 1843 novel <title level="m">Gjentagelsen</title> <gloss><title level="m">Repetition</title></gloss>, attributed to Constantin Constantius, in order to demonstrate how Blixen reorders Kierkegaard’s three stages of human existence, with the aesthetic taking precedence over the ethical and the religious.</p>
        
        <p>On the whole, Bunch’s book is successful at demonstrating how Blixen adapts, inverts, subjects, and rejects certain tropes and ideas about religion and gender that also appear in many of the pseudonymous texts from Kierkegaard’s first authorship, though the textual connections are sometimes rather tenuous. Bunch is to be particularly congratulated for the rich archival material he has gathered here, which will be of use to future scholars. Since the book relies heavily on a few crucial but somewhat dated pieces of Blixen and Kierkegaard scholarship, it is less connected to contemporary scholarly discourse than it would have been if it had engaged with more (and more recent) scholarship in not only Kierkegaard and Blixen studies, but also gender studies, feminist theory, and religious studies. While many of Bunch’s insights are valuable in terms of understanding Blixen’s works, he stops short of making an argument for how this enhanced understanding of the tension between Kierkegaard’s and Blixen’s life-views contributes to a deeper understanding of either Danish literary culture or the broader categories of faith and gender. The conclusion gestures in this direction, notably by suggesting that Blixen’s subversion of Kierkegaard qualifies her as a <soCalled>strong poet</soCalled> worthy of international attention, but needs further development and nuance to be compelling. The inclusion, in the last paragraph of the book, of a table of reductionist dichotomies according to which Kierkegaard’s and Blixen’s works should be understood is an unfortunate, jarring note on which to end an otherwise thoughtful and thought-provoking text.</p>
        
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