Henning Mankell: My responsibilty is to react
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Not SyncedWhen people ask me what is my main inspiration
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Not SyncedI say it is the ancient Greek drama
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Not Syncedif you take a play like Medea that's written 2300 years ago
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Not Syncedit is about a woman who murders her children because of jalousy in relation to her husband
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Not Syncedif that is not a crime story, I don't know what a crime story is
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Not Syncedthe only difference is that there is no police officer in it
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Not Syncedbecause in Greece at that time there was no police force
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Not Syncedbut I can assure you if they had had a police force, there would also have a policeman in the play
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Not Syncedbut this story uses the mirror of crime to look upon contradictions in society
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Not Syncedthat is what interests me.
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Not SyncedLook at McBeth, take McBeth and put Richard Nixon in there:
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Not Syncedyou have the same story, in a way.
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Not SyncedAnd then I can say that, yes, there are also pure crime fictions that inspire me.
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Not SyncedFor example Sherlock Holmes.
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Not SyncedBecause many histories talk about English society,
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Not Syncedabout hypocrisy, about many things
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Not SyncedSo, I don't see any differences by writing crime fiction or another novel
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Not SyncedI think, I put up my cheek a little and say that crime fiction is one of the oldest literary genre that exists
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Not Syncedit's not invented by Edgar Alan Poe, it's much older than that.
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Not SyncedAll of my ancestors were musicians, they were playing in churches, organ players and
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Not Syncedmy grandfather was a composer and I think that when I was young I also thought of myself as a musician
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Not Syncedbut I realised quite quickly that (I was playing the violin) I would never be as good as I would want to be
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Not Syncedso I, in a way, chose another instrument because you have to understand that writing is a sort of instrument you have in your hands
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Not SyncedBut on the other hand you might say that music is a very essential part of writing
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Not Syncedas it is in painting, as it is in sculpturing, as it is in any other kind of art making, I would say
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Not SyncedMy home was full of music but it was also full of books
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Not Syncedand I think I grew up in what you can call a really, really liberal family because
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Not Syncedfirst of all no one said anything if you were late at night reading
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Not Syncedand secondly no one asked you what you read
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Not Syncedand that is to me a good definition of what is a liberal family
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Not SyncedI think that the specific thing with my childhood was the fact that there was no mother around
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Not Syncedshe had left the family so I grew up with my father and he was very occupied
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Not Syncedbut I can still remember at night sometimes I would tell him something about what I had read
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Not Syncedand he was clever enough to take two minutes to listen to all the stupid things that I said
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Not Syncedand about what I read
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Not Syncedand I think it is one of the lessons that I learned: you always have to listen to a child
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Not SyncedI think that the real artist is the child because if you remember back when you were 4, 5 or 6 years old,
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Not Syncedyou know, you had an enormous belief in the fact that you could transform a stone into a car,
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Not Syncedor a piece of wood into whatever
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Not SyncedNow, then you start school and you know what happens
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Not Syncedrationality takes over … maybe it is necessary
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Not Syncedbut later on when you maybe eventually would like to become an artist,
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Not Syncedthen you have to recounter the thing you had as a child
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Not SyncedI think that it has to do with the sort of connection back to the courage you had as a child
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Not Syncedto ask the really, really difficult questions
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Not SyncedI sometimes ask people when I am out talking:
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Not Syncedwho do you think is my greatest idol? or icon?
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Not Syncedand people guess this, and that, and I say
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Not Syncedno, I have photo, a small photo on my wall
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Not Syncedand the greatest idol is myself as a 12 year old
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Not Syncedand when I watch these guy, this boy, this me at 12 years old,
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Not SyncedI think that at time I was at my best. I did not see any limit to life.
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Not SyncedI believed in imagination, in fantasy, and reality
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Not SyncedI thought every mountain was possible to climb, every desert was possible to get through
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Not Syncedso I look at that boy and I try to imitate him, I try to be as brave and as good as he was.
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Not SyncedThe sensation of being able to put one word after another word making a sentence, and then making another sentence,
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Not Syncedthen having a story … this is to me a miracle.
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Not SyncedAnd this is the understanding of reading
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Not Syncedand then obviously came the next miracle: that you realise that you could do that yourself.
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Not SyncedIt was the next miracle.
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Not SyncedI still remember that the first thing I ever wrote was a verse on Robinson Crusoe on one page
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Not SyncedI would give a finger to have that paper left
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Not Syncedbut I don't have it, it's gone of course … I probably was 6 years old when I wrote it and I, by the way,
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Not Syncedstill believe that Robinson Crusoe is the best novel ever written
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Not Syncedfor a very simple reason: because Robinson is not alone on the island before Friday comes,
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Not Syncedhe is alone on the island with the reader and that's important
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Not Syncedyou are on that island, with Robinson
- Title:
- Henning Mankell: My responsibilty is to react
- Description:
-
Interview with Swedish writer Henning Mankell, whose books have sold in
more than 40 million copies. Here he reflects upon his work,
inspirations and the role of the intellectual in society.Henning Mankell (b. 1948) is best known for his crime fiction and his character Kurt Wallander, a police inspector living and working in the Swedish town of Ystad. In the interview he states that he regards crime fiction as one of the oldest literary genres in the world. Crime fiction, Mankell argues, has always mirrored the surrounding society. In that sense, the ancient drama of Medea or Shakespeare's Macbeth could be seen in that tradition, too. Furthermore, Mankell speaks about his early years, growing up only with a father, though in a family, in which music and books played an important role.
"The real artist is the child", Mankell says, as a child does not see any limits in life and dares to ask all the important questions. Finally, Mankell reflects upon his continuos engagement in current affairs, whether it concerns matters of illiteracy in his second home Africa or his outspoken critic of the state of Israel in relation to the Palestinians. "As a writer, I am an intellectual", Mankell says. "And as an intellectual, I have to speak."
Copyright: Louisiana Channel, Louisiana Museum of Modern Art.
Meet more artists at http://channel.louisiana.dk
Louisiana Channel is a non-profit video channel for the Internet launched by the Louisiana Museum of Modern Art in November 2012. Each week Louisiana Channel will publish videos about and with artists in visual art, literature, architcture, design etc.
Read more:
http://channel.louisiana.dk/aboutSupported by Nordea-fonden.
- Video Language:
- English
- Team:
- Louisiana Channel
- Duration:
- 16:17
KtiK edited English subtitles for Henning Mankell: My responsibilty is to react | ||
KtiK edited English subtitles for Henning Mankell: My responsibilty is to react | ||
KtiK edited English subtitles for Henning Mankell: My responsibilty is to react | ||
KtiK edited English subtitles for Henning Mankell: My responsibilty is to react | ||
KtiK edited English subtitles for Henning Mankell: My responsibilty is to react | ||
KtiK edited English subtitles for Henning Mankell: My responsibilty is to react | ||
KtiK edited English subtitles for Henning Mankell: My responsibilty is to react | ||
KtiK edited English subtitles for Henning Mankell: My responsibilty is to react |