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Danish Studies LITERATURE By ERIK M. CHRISTENSEN, Lecturer in Scandinavian Literature in the University of Arhus, Denmark (The place of publication is Copenhagen, unless otherwise stated) I. GENERAL No single trend is predominant. A growing interest in the history of ideas may, however, be mentioned as one indication of awareness how difficult it is to speak clearly yet without oversimplification, when literature and the history of literature are interpreted. Thus, the correct reading of ideas in two important Christian authors (N. F. S. Grundtvig and Martin A. Hansen) was a prominent subject of controversy this year and is likely to remain so in the future. Gustav Albeck, Oluf Friis, and Peter P. Rohde, Dansk litteratur historie, bd. 2, Politiken, 720 pp., illus. Treats Danish literature from I8oo to I87o; the second vol. of a planned total of four, to be reviewed when completed. Danske digtere i det 20. rlrhundrede, ed. Frederik Nielsen and Ole Restrup, bd. I, Gad, 504 pp., illus. First vol. of a planned series of three; takes the reader from Johannes V. Jensen to the first world war. First issued in I 95 I as a vol. of essays on individual authors, written by a great
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