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Gissurarson Biography

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I've removed the following from the article pending verifiability:

...some of them controversial, such as the three volume work by Hannes Hólmsteinn Gissurarson. Laxness’ widow, with public support from many of Iceland's most prominent scholars on literature, sued Gissurarson for plagiarism, accusing him of editing and/or re-prhasing whole passages from her late husband's works and passing them on as his own. Gissurarson, a long-time outspoken conservative, claimed that these allegations were motivated by politics or even personal ill-will. In November 2006, Gissurarson was acquitted on all counts by the Reykjavík District Court.

Can this be properly sourced? Jkelly 02:35, 12 February 2007 (UTC)[reply]

Which book won the Nobel?

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Hi; came here looking to see which book it was he was awarded the Nobel Prize for; it doesn't say in the article or listing, at least not by searching the article for "nobel", and it's not on the Nobel Prize page either.Skookum1 21:54, 14 April 2007 (UTC)[reply]

Is it not the case that the Nobel Prize for Literature is awarded not for a specific book but for a lifetime's achievement? --MV Overchurch 23:23, 21 June 2007 (UTC)[reply]


Yes, it's a lifetime achievement award, in a sense, unlike some of the other more specific prizes. Probably because it's new and "tacked on" to the original concept of the prizes.


Sure, it's a lifetime achievement award. However, often a specific book is singled out as the "magnum opus" of the author, in Laxness' case it was the book Gerpla, which was considered a modern revival of the Icelandic sagas with all the existential irony of the 20th century.

Independent people is probably most Icelander´s favorite. --68.0.213.208 (talk) 04:40, 23 August 2008 (UTC)[reply]

By the way, I would think this article need some reworking, the scope of the article is narrow and one would be mislead to think that Laxness was predominantly a catholic writer. —Preceding unsigned comment added by 194.144.13.213 (talk) 09:53, 8 February 2008 (UTC)[reply]

Couple of issues:

  • The Prize for Literature is neither "new" nor "tacked-on" - it has been around as long as all of the other prizes (except for Economics) and is one of the oldest literary prizes in the world.
  • The Nobel is a lifetime achievement award. There was no mention in the Nobel citation of any individual work - saying that Gerpla, for example, is his magnum opus, is original research and has no bearing on his being awarded the Prize.
  • Finally, please sign your contributions to the talk pages. Just type four tildes. Irregulargalaxies (talk) 17:40, 24 August 2008 (UTC)[reply]

Photo

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In Icelandic wikipedia,there is a good photo of Laxness which is given by a website for promotion of the writer. What is the appropriate license I should give if I upload it? --ZaDiak (talk) 00:50, 13 July 2010 (UTC)[reply]


Total overhaul

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Hi,

This article needs a complete rewriting, which would be obvious to anyone who know Laxness' work and his life. With all due respect to the pioneers of this article, the present article misses crucial points in Laxness' life, is filled with trivia unrelated to Laxness, and does not cover the literary importance of his work, in Europe and America during his lifetime, and still in Icelandic culture. If there are no protests within the next weeks I could volunteer.

Best regards —Preceding unsigned comment added by 194.144.13.213 (talk) 10:02, 8 February 2008 (UTC)[reply]


Addendum 2/7/09

I am new to wikipedia and just noticed that the Laxness pages are very anemic.

Recent website on Halldor Laxness now appears to be lost. This is possible in part due to the economic crisis in Iceland.

The website was: http://www2.mbl.is/mm/serefni/laxness/

I would think that recovery of this website for buffing up wikipedia page might be helpful —Preceding unsigned comment added by 173.21.235.41 (talk) 15:00, 7 March 2009 (UTC)[reply]

Dates of publishing It is correctly stated in the article that Laxness died in 1998. It therefore seems a little strange that he is claimed to have published three books posthumously. The fact is that these books are reprints and exerpts from formerly published works and should be clearly marked as such. 212.30.253.30 (talk) 17:03, 13 July 2009 (UTC)Þorvaldur Sigurðsson[reply]

Name

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Just a query. The strapline states "This is an Icelandic name. The last name is a family name, but this person is properly referred to by the given name Halldór".

So why is he then referred to throughout the article as "Laxness" rather than Halldór? — Preceding unsigned comment added by Saxmund (talkcontribs) 13:34, 9 February 2013 (UTC)[reply]

Yes, it is fine to refer to Halldór by his last name. Actually, it is questionable wheter that quote - "This is an Icelandic name. The last name is a family name, but this person is properly referred to by the given name Halldór" - should be in the article. This quote does base on the statement that Icelanders use an patronymic system when it comes to names. While that is true, there are exceptions, and Laxness is one of those exceptions.--Snaevar (talk) 00:03, 24 March 2013 (UTC)[reply]
Even when Icelanders have family names, they're still referred to by their first name. Laxness is almost an exception in that he was the only person (to my knowledge) to carry that particular family name, and Halldór is a common name so it's very easy to refer to him as Laxness (although "Kiljan" is just as popular). When he was alive Icelanders wouldn't just call him "Laxness" when addressing him though. They'd call him Halldór or a variation thereof. For that reason alone the name header should be there. I feel this has only been removed because people think it's "complicated", while it should stay for the simple reason that it's correct. finval (talk) 17:43, 30 August 2013 (UTC)[reply]
Marginally on topic: Sorry for confusing anybody. The Icelandic system isn't just about the ending of last names -son or -dóttir. Strictly yes, only those are patronymic. What I'm getting at is that Halldór is still preferred by all Icelanders - including Halldór himself - whatever the last name. I'm in no way doubting that Halldór took the last name Laxness (and the name Kiljan). I'm not old or wise enough to know if that was illegal at the time however. I think it was and would be now under current Icelandic naming law (I'm pretty sure there the one from 1996 is not the first one[1]). You can (now) change your name (once) but can't change to whatever first name or the last name at all (in the way he did). I'm sure Halldór Guðjónsson was still legally correct at the time (and may have been in the census). Anyway, he had published under that name and that name is also appropriately in the lead. Nothing is "false" then about the hatnote. I had put Laxness in the hatnote previously and am ok with also including that. Someone put "clarify" after it and I thought maybe just dropping Laxness from there might be less confusing as not really necessary there. See also my additions at the same time to the main text.
About hatnotes-templates (not my invention: Template:Icelandic name) for Icelandic names (not just patronymic ones, that is not the main issue of the hatnote in Laxness' article), see a former Prime Minister of Iceland Geir Haarde hatnote [2] and writer/poet Eiríkur Örn Norðdahl, his hatnote I actually added.
It seems to me the article is in excellent shape (including info on name). Thanks! I simplified, deleted some of my edits here. comp.arch (talk) 09:10, 2 October 2014 (UTC)[reply]

Further reading

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Removed "further reading" section, most were in Icelandic and not available for English readers, and put the rest in the reference section.Dktrfz (talk) 22:15, 19 June 2013 (UTC)[reply]

Early years

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18:48, 1 March 2014‎ Comp.arch (talk | contribs)‎ . . (18,657 bytes) (+143)‎ . . (Both are "right", main town is postal code 270, rural part is 271 still Mosfellsbær.
Icelandic version says Mosfellsbær. See "phone book" ja.is and http://gljufrasteinn.is/is/um_gljufrastein/fyrir_gesti/stadsetning_gljufrasteins/) (undo | thank)


I see your point. Icelandic version (at gljúfrasetinn.is, meant for travellers. Icelandic wikipedia article is ok) is wrong also, no telephone, no Mosfellsbær either. That is what caught my eye. Really what I (first) wanted to fix was that he moved to Mosfellsveit (-sveit means "rural"). Hope the language is clear and correct now. comp.arch (talk) 09:44, 17 March 2014 (UTC)[reply]

Added diacritic with-in quotes

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I changed:

"The demoralization of the occupation period is described... nowhere as dramatically as in Halldor Kiljan Laxness' Atómstöðin

to:

"The demoralization of the occupation period is described... nowhere as dramatically as in Halldor Kiljan Laxness' Atómstöðin

Maybe somone had already changed to "Atómstöðin", I don't know, if not it seems strange that the quote used "ð" and "ö" there and not "ó" in Halldór. Maybe it didn't as the quote is in English, but the writer Einarsson may have been Icelandic and I don't have the actual source for the quote. Even if diatrics weren't there can they be added as it is a "typo" (without sic)? comp.arch (talk) 09:38, 17 March 2014 (UTC)[reply]

I only saw this now on the talk page. I made the edits to the quotes[3]. I didn't have access to the books and thought someone didn't know how to type them in (it seemed an Icelander wrote at least one of the books). I couldn't revert my own change and not sure all quotes need reverting as not all the quotes are from the same book. They might all need reverting at least those you know to be incorrect. Maybe quotes need not be exact in this regard but I want to err on the side that is known. In all non-quotes however please keep as is. comp.arch (talk) 18:00, 25 September 2014 (UTC)[reply]

Curvy quotes are evidently not allowed in Wikipedia, my revert was reverted by Walter Görlitz. Too bad the typography has to be “dumbed down” but I suppose the law of least common denominator applies to Wikipedia as it does in most things.Dktrfz (talk) 16:15, 15 February 2016 (UTC)[reply]

Hatnote for Halldór Laxness (album)

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Is this really necessary? Is an album by an unknown band likely to cause confusion with a Nobel Laureate, or is it merely self-serving?Dktrfz (talk) 00:16, 3 June 2017 (UTC)[reply]

Further Additions

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Will be working on sourcing and inserting quotes for those books without them already.Dktrfz (talk) 19:54, 28 December 2017 (UTC)[reply]

GA Review

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This review is transcluded from Talk:Halldór Laxness/GA1. The edit link for this section can be used to add comments to the review.

Reviewer: Usernameunique (talk · contribs) 06:39, 19 January 2022 (UTC)[reply]


This article is a long way from GA standard, and I am quickfailing the nomination. Dktrfz, I'm sorry you had to wait two months only to see the nomination fall short so quickly; hopefully the following comments will provide ways to improve the article. I think the most helpful thing to do, however, would be to read other good or featured articles on authors, and see how they approach their subjects.

The article's main flaws are that it lacks both cohesion and breadth, and that it gives equal emphasis to the most important and most trivial aspects of Laxness's life and work. The article is largely fine through the first half of "1920s", but then becomes essentially a series of one- to two-sentence bullet points that, like chronological trivia, jump from one subject to another. We are told that Sjálfstætt fólk has been described as "… one of the best books of the twentieth century.", yet this centurial masterpiece is given a single sentence. Similarly, Heimsljós has been "… consistently regarded by many critics as his most important work.", yet it gets a mere two sentences. (Not to mention, these are sweeping declarations without context or explanation.) In the 1950s, meanwhile, three "[m]ajor works" are glossed in a sentence; Laxness's 1957 vacation is given more detail. All in all, it is as if the article on J. K. Rowling relegated Harry Potter to a sentence.

There are other issues—for example, uncited paragraphs, a difficult-to-navigate references section, and the suspicion that other relevant sources exist—but, ultimately, the article needs to be substantially reworked in order to get into GA shape. That's certainly possible—and Dktrfz, I hope this review wasn't too dispiriting!—it just will take time and effort. --Usernameunique (talk) 06:39, 19 January 2022 (UTC)[reply]

Thanks for your input, Usernameunique,

Here is a Wikipedia guide I used for assessing good article nominations:

   The article should be clearly written, in good prose, with correct spelling and grammar. Check for coherent formatting, good organization of the article into sections, appropriate use of wikilinks, and other aspects of the Manual of Style referred to in the Good article criteria. After you have read the article, check that the lead section is a good summary and introduction to the topic.
   The article should be factually accurate according to reliable sources, with inline citations (typically using footnotes) for the six types of material named in the GA criteria.[5] The article should not copy text from sources without quotation or in text attribution, and it should not contain any original synthesis of source material, or other forms of original research. Perfectly formatted citations are not required. Read the detailed guidance at WP:DEADREF before addressing any non-functional URLs.
   The article should broadly cover the topic without unnecessary digressions. The article may, and sometimes should, go into detail, but it is not required to be comprehensive.
   The article should be written from the neutral point of view: this viewpoint strives to represent all other views fairly, proportionately, and without bias. Ensure that the article describes disputes without engaging in them.
   The article should be stable, with no ongoing edit wars: constructive article improvement and routine editing does not apply here.
   The article should comply with image use policy. Images are encouraged but not required. Any images used should be appropriate to the article, have captions and free licenses or valid fair use rationales.
   The article is free of obvious copyright violations. Reviewers can use several tools, as well as Google searches, to help establish whether material has been plagiarised or cut-and-paste from some of the electronic sources used; but this is not a trivial undertaking.

I didn't appreciate any of your objections and found some of them insulting.

It is evident that this process is beyond my understanding. Dktrfz (talk) 15:53, 19 January 2022 (UTC)[reply]

I'm sorry that you are disappointed, Dktrfz; certainly, I was not trying to be insulting. If you have any particular points of concern, please feel free to let me know, and if you feel as if the review was inadequate, you are always welcome to post on the main discussion page. I would just add that bringing at article up to the good article standard is a learning process, not a "you get it or you don't" situation. Try taking a look at some of the articles in the "Writers, publishers, and critics" section of this page (or, better yet, look at some featured articles). Also, trying to bring an article on a Nobel laureate (or, for that matter, on someone like Frank Lloyd Wright) up to good article standard is a very ambitious task, even when one is already familiar with the criteria and has contributed to previous good articles; starting with a more minor subject would be an easier way to ease in. --Usernameunique (talk) 18:05, 19 January 2022 (UTC)[reply]

B-class, not quite

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This article is a little focused on his works and not much else. See the Ævi and Viðurkenningar chapters in the icelandic wikipedia article, which tries to cover his lifetime and awards from universities. I would like to see a note on the style that the books use. Also https://www.mbl.is/serefni/laxness/ shows how detailed an article about him could be. I am declining to move the rating to B-class for these reasons, but I will also note it does not need very much to get there, I am not expecting anything near of an rewrite of the mbl.is article. Snævar (talk) 12:34, 7 February 2022 (UTC)[reply]

Thanks for your constructive remarks, Snævar.

I looked at and Google translated the Icelandic Wikipedia article. The Viðurkenning section of other awards and honorary doctorates might not mean much to English readers and the Lenin Peace Prize and the Sonning Prize, which seem to be more significant, were not mentioned. The information in the Viðurkenning section seems to duplicate much of information in the English Wikipedia article, although the Matthías Johannessen quote from the mbl.is article is exceptional. The mbl.is articles have a big problem in that, while beautifully written, nothing is referenced except for the quotes. It's becoming obvious that there is a big disconnect between what I think is a good article and what some reviewers think. I have read several good articles and even some starred articles and most fall short of the Wikipedia guidelines I posted above. I realize now it was a mistake on my part to even begin the process, a mistake I won't be making again, although your comments were appreciated.Dktrfz (talk) 16:45, 22 February 2022 (UTC)[reply]