Josef Kjellgren

Swedish writer
The basics

Quick Facts

IntroSwedish writer
PlacesSweden
wasWriter Poet
Work fieldLiterature
Gender
Male
Birth13 November 1907
Death8 April 1948Stockholm (aged 40 years)
The details

Biography

Josef Kjellgren, (13 November 1907, Mörkö, Södermanland – 8 April 1948, Stockholm) was a Swedish writer and playwright.
Kjellgren was a proletarian writer and a member of the influential modernist literary group Fem unga ('Five Young Ones') who published an anthology of the same name in 1929. Kjellgren's main theme was proletarian internationalism and solidarity within the working class. He published modernist proletarian poetry and books about his travels in Europe in the early 1930s, such as På snålskjuts genom Europa ('Across Europe Without a Penny in My Pocket', 1930). However, Kjellgren is best known for his later novels, including Människor kring en bro ('People Around a Bridge', 1935), about the building of Västerbron in Stockholm, and Smaragden ('The Emerald', 1939). Kjellgren was also a journalist and wrote a play, Okänd svensk soldat ('Unknown Swedish Soldier', 1938), which was the basis for the 1948 movie Främmande hamn ('Foreign Harbour'), directed by Hampe Faustman.
Kjellgren died of tuberculosis in 1948.

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