Hans Jæger
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Hans Jæger (September 2, 1854 in Drammen, Norway - February 8, 1910 in Oslo) was a Norwegian writer, philosopher and anarchist political activist who was part of the Oslo (then Kristiania) based bohemian group Kristianiabohêmen. He was prosecuted for his book Fra Kristiania-bohemen and convicted to 60 days imprisonment in a supreme court ruling in 1886.
The following year, he was forced to flee Norway. He had been sentanced to 150 more days in prison after the Norwegian government learned that he had sent 300 copies of Christiania Bohemians to Sweden under the auspices of a volume of Christmas stories.
He was a friend of Edvard Munch, and was the subject of one of Munch's paintings.
[edit] Bibliography
- Kants fornuftskritik ( Kant's critique of pure reason) 1878
- Olga (play) 1883
- En intellektuel Forførelse (play) (An Intellectual Seduction) 1884
- Fra Kristiania-bohemen (From the Christiania Bohemians) 1885
- Julefortællinger av Hans Jæger (Christmas Stories by Hans Jæger, in reality the second
volume of From the Christiania Bohemians) 1886
- Albertine (with Christian Krohg) 1886
- Min forsvarstale i høyesterett (My Defence Speech in the Supreme Court) 1886
- Kristianiabilleder (Images of Christiania) 1888
- Novelletter (Short Stories) 1889
- Bohemens erotiske bekjennelser (The Erotic Confessions of the Bohemians)
- Anarkiets bibel (The Bible of Anarchism) 1906
- Socialismens ABC (written between 1906-1910, never finished) (The ABC of Socialism)
[edit] External links
- Hans Jæger Page at the Anarchist Encyclopedia