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The Atom Station ( is, Atómstöðin) is a novel by Icelandic author
Halldór Laxness Halldór Kiljan Laxness (; born Halldór Guðjónsson; 23 April 1902 – 8 February 1998) was an Icelandic writer and winner of the 1955 Nobel Prize in Literature. He wrote novels, poetry, newspaper articles, essays, plays, travelogues and s ...
, who was awarded the
Nobel Prize in Literature ) , image = Nobel Prize.png , caption = , awarded_for = Outstanding contributions in literature , presenter = Swedish Academy , holder = Annie Ernaux (2022) , location = Stockholm, Sweden , year = 1901 , ...
in 1955. The initial print run sold out on the day it was published, for the first time in Icelandic history.


Plot summary

Ugla, an unrefined girl from the countryside, moves from an outlying area of Northern Iceland to the capital city of Reykjavík in order to work for Búi Árland, a member of parliament, and to learn how to play the organ. She’s met with a world that’s completely foreign to her: politicians and the military move freely about the city, and she views city residents as spoiled, snobbish and arrogant. In contrast, she comes from a rural area where the Icelandic Sagas of the Middle Ages constitute the majority of what people discuss and ponder and are viewed as more important than reality. These historical backgrounds are certainly important and provide crucial patterns. The prime minister subsequently carries out secret dealings with the Americans and “sells” the country. Ugla, however, also confronts other current issues, above all in the organ player’s house. There, she comes in contact with
communist Communism (from Latin la, communis, lit=common, universal, label=none) is a far-left sociopolitical, philosophical, and economic ideology and current within the socialist movement whose goal is the establishment of a communist society, a s ...
and
anarchist Anarchism is a political philosophy and movement that is skeptical of all justifications for authority and seeks to abolish the institutions it claims maintain unnecessary coercion and hierarchy, typically including, though not neces ...
mindsets and likewise protests the construction of an atom station in Iceland. After a short relationship with Búi Árland, Ugla decides to return to the “selfconscious policeman”, who is the father of her recently born child.


Cast


In Eystridalur

* Ugla Falsdóttir, her mother and father * The priest


At the home of Búi Árland

* Búi Árland * Búi's wife * Búi's cook and her daughter * Their children: Arngrímur (Landaljómi), Guðný (Aldinblóð, 'Fruit-Blood'), Þórður (Gullhrútur, 'gold ram'), Þórgunnur (Daggeisli) * Visiting politicians: the Prime Minister, Óli fígúra, other politicians, and Americans


At the Organist's house

* Organistinn (The Organist) * The Organist's mother * Kleopatra * benjamín the atom-poet (a god) (mafía F.F.F.) * briljantín the atom-poet (a god) (mafía F.F.F.) * Tvö hundruð þúsund naglbítar ('Two hundred thousand pliers') (mafía F.F.F.) * Lögreglumaður feiminn ('The Selfconscious Policeman') * Lögreglumaður ófeiminn ('The Unselfconscious Policeman')


Background

''The Atom Station'' was written in 1946 and 1947 and published in 1948. The setting of the novel was based on the British and subsequent American occupation of Iceland during World War II and on the urbanization and monetization of the Icelandic economy caused by this situation. Many people in Iceland thought Iceland's independence was threatened by the United States' request in 1946 to establish a military base in Keflavík for 99 years, as well as the pressure on Iceland to join NATO. Laxness thought that the occupation was a threat to Icelandic life because in the event of an atomic war Iceland would become a target due to the military base. He was also critical of the fact that Icelandic jurisdiction was not applicable to the area within the military base. These fears are based on the impression left by the two
atomic bomb A nuclear weapon is an explosive device that derives its destructive force from nuclear reactions, either fission (fission bomb) or a combination of fission and fusion reactions (thermonuclear bomb), producing a nuclear explosion. Both bomb ...
s which had been recently dropped on Hiroshima and Nagasaki; Laxness began writing the novel shortly after these events. The Icelandic Parliament (the Althing) did finally agree to the United States' requests, provoking the 1949 anti-NATO riot in Iceland. While many of the characters in the novel can be understood as satires of real figures in Icelandic business and politics (or otherwise modeled on Laxness's friends and acquaintances), the work is too sophisticated simply to be read as a ''roman à clef''. According to Laxness's biographer Hannes Hólmsteinn Gissurarson: * One model for the main character, Ugla, was Arnheiður Sigurðardóttir. * The Organist was inspired primarily by Laxness's friends Erlendur Guðmundsson í Unuhúsi (to whom the book is dedicated) and Þórður Sigtryggsson. * The main models for Búi Árland would mainly be
Guðmundur Vilhjálmsson Guðmundur or Gudmundur is an Icelandic male first name, sometimes shortened to Gummi or Gvendur. The Icelandic surname Guðmundsson is a patronymic surname meaning ''son of Guðmundur''. Guðmundsdóttir is a patronymic surname meaning ''daught ...
, the chairman of Eimskip, and
Pálmi Hannesson Pálmi Hannesson (3 January 1898, in Skagafjarðarsýsla – 22 November 1956) was an Icelandic naturalist and rector of the Menntaskólinn í Reykjavík. Pálmi was born a farmer's son; studied in Akureyri before proceeding to the Lærði Skóli ...
, rector of Menntaskólinn í Reykjavík. * The Prime Minister is based on Ólafur Thors (and the novel, amongst other things, a transparent attack on Ólafur). * Landaljómi is based on Thor Vilhjálmsson. * The god Briljantín is based on
Ragnar Frímann Kristjánsson Ragnar ( non, Ragnarr ) is a masculine Germanic given name, composed of the Old Norse elements ''ragin-'' "counsel" and ''hari-'' "army". Origin and variations The Proto-Germanic forms of the compounds are "ragina" (counsel) and "harjaz" or " ...
* Kleópatra's model is Guðmunda Sigurðardóttir. * Tvö hundruð þúsund naglbítar (Two Hundred Thousand Pliers) is a combination of Sigurjón Pétursson and
Jóhann Þ. Jósefsson Jóhann is a masculine given name. It is the Icelandic and Faroese form of the name Johann, a form of the Germanic and Latin given name "Johannes". The English-language form is John (given name), John. The Icelandic surname Jóhannsson is a patron ...
.


Reception

Early Icelandic reviewers read the book primarily as a satire on the politics of the day; it has traditionally been seen as one of Laxness's weaker works, though it has long been read as Iceland's first urban novel, foreshadowing the prominence of Reykjavík in more recent literature. However, more recent critics have seen it as offering more enduring theological, philosophical and political commentary: Giuliano D'Amico, for example, argues that 'neither with the Americans nor with the Soviets, the characters of ''Atómstöðin'' seem to advocate for a “Third Europe” that ... resembles the “third space” articulated by postcolonial theory'. Laxness endured political persecution for the novel: the
Alþingi The Alþingi (''general meeting'' in Icelandic, , anglicised as ' or ') is the supreme national parliament of Iceland. It is one of the oldest surviving parliaments in the world. The Althing was founded in 930 at ("thing fields" or "assembly ...
withdrew his state writer's stipend; he was prosecuted for describing an abortion; and 'Icelandic and American authorities even started investigating his periods of residence in America, with the hope of finding some fiscal irregularities and ruining him'. He also struggled to get the novel translated.


Influence and adaptations

''Atómstöðin'' has been characterised as 'what many readers and critics gradually came to think of as the exemplary Reykjavík novel', focusing on urban Icelandic life for the first time. Laxness dubbed one of his characters, benjamín, an ''atómskáld'' ('atom-poet'), as a derogatory reference to modernist poets. The name came to be applied to a real group of poets, the
Atom Poets The Atom Poets were a group of Icelandic modernist poets working in the wake of modernist poets like Steinn Steinarr and Jón úr Vör, the most prominent of whom were Einar Bragi, Hannes Sigfússon, Jón Óskar, Sigfús Daðason, Dagur Sigurða ...
. The book was adapted as a film by Þorsteinn Jónsson in 1984. Through the film, the book has been seen to have continued resonances in twenty-first-century Iceland: 'the powerful imagery is coincidentally linked to the 2009 protests ... following the Icelandic banking crisis'.Helga Þórey Jónsdóttir, 'Atomic Station', in ''World Film Locations: Reykjavík'', ed. by Jez Connolly and Caroline Whelan (Bristol: Intellect Books, 2012), pp. 14-15 (14).


See also

* GIUK gap


References


Sources

* * * {{DEFAULTSORT:Atom Station 1948 Icelandic novels Novels by Halldór Laxness Novels set in Iceland Icelandic-language novels