Tuesday, October 6, 2009

Famous Swedes

Famous Swedes

Portraits of some great Swedes. Who is your favorite Swedish celebrity?


5 questions for Jan Guillou

by: Judith Hammer

At the book fair in Göteborg, Sweden.se got a quick chat with Swedish author and journalist Jan Guillou, the man behind the spy fiction novels about Carl Hamilton and the historical fiction trilogy about Knight Templar Arn Magnusson.


5 questions for Jan Guillou

by: Judith Hammer
At the book fair in Göteborg, Sweden.se got a quick chat with Swedish author and journalist Jan Guillou, the man behind the spy fiction novels about Carl Hamilton and the historical fiction trilogy about Knight Templar Arn Magnusson.


Jan Guillou. Photo: Peter Knutson

1. What made you start writing?

“You start thinking about it when you’re very young. Teenager dreams, like you want to be famous rather than rich… When I was a teenager, the prestigious writers were French. Like Claude Simon and Jean-Marie Gustave Le Clézio. So I imitated those guys. And I did quite well.

“In 1968 I was 24 years old, when the political indications for writing were obvious. The world was on fire. Portugal was involved in three colonial wars in Africa. Israel had been turned into an occupying power. Then writing became something else than art. It became an instrument that could be used to convince people of your political beliefs. That is what I’ve been doing ever since then.”

2. Where do you find your inspiration?

“I don’t need inspiration, because I’m a professional. Inspiration is for amateurs. It’s an excuse not to write: ‘I haven’t found my inspiration today. I could do the tidying up and the household instead.’ That’s rubbish. That’s amateurish. I just sit down and write.”

3. What image of Sweden do you think you convey to your readers?

“A democracy that is not flawless. My job is to find those little flaws and to describe them. And that’s a version of Sweden that our politicians would not like to be seen.”

4. Name a Swedish writer who has influenced your writing.

“The first Swedish writer who had an influence on me was Strindberg, when I was very young. He is the father of all modern literature in Sweden. Even as a 17-year-old school boy I read his novels and enjoyed them very much. He was the introduction to literature as an instrument, as a possibility, as a dream.

“Later I was influenced by Maj Sjöwall and Per Wahlöö, because when I was sentenced to prison in 1973*, everyone except me read their books. In prison I had the chance to read all their stories. I realized that these guys had done something quite simple: They had transported the American hard-boiled style of writing into Swedish — just like that. And it works. While the American police novel in those days had a political tendency toward the right, or even worse, Sjöwall/Wahlöö turned their writing into communist propaganda.

“So, if they could do that with a police novel, I could probably do it with a spy novel. And that’s what I did. I could never have done that without the idea from Sjöwall/Wahlöö.”

5. What do you like most about Sweden?

“Probably the combination of democracy and nature. We’re very fortunate to have a beautiful country, no starvation, no overpopulation. We won’t be the first to drown when the sea level rises.”

*Guillou served 10 months in prison for espionage after having exposed a secret intelligence organization.


National Anthem The Swedish National Anthem and The King's Song

The Swedish National Anthem and The King's Song

The text of the Swedish National Anthem, "Du gamla, Du fria," was written by folklorist and ballad writer Richard Dybeck (1811-77) and set to a folk tune from the province of Västmanland in the middle of the 19th century. By the end of the century, the song was so popular that it became the Swedish national anthem.

The Swedish National Anthem

Listen to the Swedish National Anthem (wma)*

Du gamla, du fria, du fjällhöga Nord,
du tysta, du glädjerika sköna!
Jag hälsar dig, vänaste land uppå jord,
din sol, din himmel, dina ängder gröna,
din sol, din himmel, dina ängder gröna.

Du tronar på minnen från fornstora dar,
då ärat ditt namn flög över jorden.
Jag vet, att du är och du blir vad du var.
Ja, jag vill leva, jag vill dö i Norden!
Ja, jag vill leva, jag vill dö i Norden!

Thou ancient, thou freeborn, thou mountainous North,
In beauty and peace our hearts beguiling,
I greet thee, thou loveliest land on the earth,
Thy sun, thy skies, thy verdant meadows smiling.
Thy sun, thy skies, thy verdant meadows smiling.

Thy throne rests on mem’ries from great days of yore,
When worldwide renown was valour’s guerdon.
I know to thy name thou art true as before.
Oh, I would live and I would die in Sweden,
Oh, I would live and I would die in Sweden.

The King’s Song

Written around 1844, The King’s Song (“Ur svenska hjärtans djup en gång”) pays homage to the Swedish king as the symbol of the Swedish nation. Lyrics by C. V. A. Strandberg and music by Otto Lindblad.

Listen to the King's Song (wma)*

Ur svenska hjärtans djup en gång
en samfälld och en enkel sång,
som går till kungen fram!
Var honom trofast och hans ätt,
gör kronan på hans hjässa lätt,
och all din tro till honom sätt,
du folk av frejdad stam!

The lyrics of the Swedish National Anthem and the King's Song (as a pdf file)

Performed by the Band of the Royal Guards Regiment. Conductor: Mats Janhagen.

All rights reserved.

Copyright: The Swedish Institute and the Band of the Royal Guards Regiment.

*) To listen to these songs, you need Windows Media Player, which can be downloaded free of charge at www.microsoft.com.

Travel and Tourism Sweden in brief / A nation of travelers

Sweden in brief / A nation of travelers

On the whole, the Swedes are extremely well-traveled. Travel by charter tour packages took off in earnest during the 1950s, first to Mallorca and later the Canary Islands (Spain). Today travel has expanded to the point where it has become common among Swedish young people to make round-the-world trips and for Swedish middle-class families to travel as far as Thailand on their winter vacations. Heavy travel is an important explanation for the Swedish people's high degree of internationalization and good knowledge of English and other languages.


Full speed! Photo: Henrik Trygg/Image Bank Sweden

A significantly more recent phenomenon is that travel into and out of Sweden is well on its way toward reaching a balance. Foreign tourism in Sweden has increased dramatically in recent years. What can be called "nature tourism" still accounts for most such travel. Sweden's exceptional natural scenery and enormous tracts of untouched wilderness are a major attraction to the inhabitants of more densely populated parts of Europe and the world. People from around the globe travel to Lapland to experience the magnificent natural scenery and such exotic phenomena as the midnight sun, the aurora borealis (northern lights), Arctic chill and total silence. During the warmer half of the year, people mainly from other countries of Europe travel to all parts of Sweden to enjoy the luxury of peaceful solitude in a splendid natural setting.

However, the type of tourism in Sweden that has grown the fastest by far in recent years is big-city tourism. Stockholm has become a world attraction, luring tourists from all over the world with its unique mixture of natural beauty, cultural heritage and modern international urban culture, including its dynamic design, fashion, gastronomic, music, art and entertainment scenes. The country's second largest city, Göteborg, is a hub for maritime traffic on the North Sea and also has plenty to offer people in search of entertainment and cultural experiences. Since the opening of the Öresund Bridge, Sweden's third-largest city, Malmö, has joined the Danish capital of Copenhagen to form an exciting new cross-border metropolitan region.

Technology and Infrastructure Sweden in brief / Problems are there to be solved


Sweden in brief / Problems are there to be solved

Sweden is a large country with long distances, a comparatively small population and a sometimes severe winter climate. During the 20th century, when Sweden was transformed in record time from a backward agrarian country into one of the world's strongest, most advanced industrial nations, there were thus heavy demands for infrastructure, transportation, communications and technological development. This background is one explanation for Sweden's sophisticated infrastructure and high degree of technological maturity today.


The Öresund Bridge. Photo: Martin Nyman/Image Bank Sweden

Looking at infrastructure, this high degree of development is reflected in everything from the road and highway network, the railroads and other transportation systems to IT, a field in which Sweden is sometimes classified as the most developed nation in the world.

One of the many eloquent indications of Sweden's internationally recognized speed in adopting new technology is that in 1900, Stockholm had more telephones — in absolute numbers — than London, Paris or Berlin. Sweden and the Swedish people have become so famous for their openness to new technology, new trends and patterns of behavior and consumption that to a growing extent, the country has come to be used as a test market by major multinational corporations in the development of new products and services.

Sports and Leisure Sweden in brief / Sporting Sweden

Sweden in brief / Sporting Sweden

Sweden is a nation of amateur athletes and physical exercise enthusiasts. The Swedes love their grandiose Nordic nature above all else, and what most of them mean by "enjoying nature" is taking active advantage of it — by going out hiking, jogging, cross-country or Alpine skiing, long-distance ice skating, sailing, paddling a canoe, fishing, playing soccer (European football) or golf and practicing just about all other imaginable sports and leisure activities.


Olympic Heptathlete Champion Carolina Klüft. Photo: Tommy Holl/Göteborg & Co

The Swedish "sports movement" is highly developed and well-dispersed. It reaches a large proportion of the population — men and women, people of all social classes and of all ages. This active lifestyle is one reason why Swedes as a whole are in comparatively good health and have one of the world's longest average life expectancies.

The breadth and popular support enjoyed by the Swedish sports movement also help explain why Sweden, considering its small population, has achieved remarkable success in major sports such as tennis, skiing, ice hockey, soccer and golf. The list of Swedish global sports stars of today and yesterday is long. Björn Borg, Mats Wilander and Stefan Edberg (tennis), Ingemar Stenmark and Pernilla Wiberg (Alpine skiing), Gunde Svan (cross-country skiing) and Jan-Ove Waldner (table tennis) are only a few of the major names from the past three decades.

Among today's biggest Swedish sports stars are Annika Sörenstam (golf), Anja Pärson (Alpine skiing), Peter Forsberg, Mats Sundin and Niklas Lidström (ice hockey), Stefan Holm, Christian Olsson, Carolina Klüft and Kajsa Bergqvist (track and field) and Fredrik Ljungberg and Zlatan Ibrahimovic (soccer).

Society and Welfare Sweden in brief / The "home of the people"

Sweden in brief / The "home of the people"

During the 20th century, at the price of the world's highest tax burden, Sweden built up what is often called the world's most generous general social welfare system, with such elements as virtually free (that is, tax-financed) schools, child care, health care, pensions, elder care, social services and various economic security systems.


Photo: AC Ridderstolpe / Image Bank Sweden

Although Sweden has always been a solid market economy, the Social Democratic governments in power for most of the 20th century borrowed many ideas from socialism. Swedish prosperity has been redistributed among the population to a greater degree than in perhaps any other country. "From each according to ability, to each according to needs" — that was the radical basic doctrine of a welfare state in which all inhabitants would always be guaranteed basic economic security in all stages of life.

This welfare state, known in Sweden as the "home of the people," was a unique experiment in social engineering that has attracted great attention among political scientists and politicians worldwide. Many of its features have been emulated in other countries. The international labels for the Swedish model are numerous — "the middle way," "the country that protects its citizens from the cradle to the grave" or simply "the Swedish model," to name just a few.

In recent decades, once the country's previous steady, high economic growth had come to an end, the Swedish welfare state has been under heavy pressures. Today the country's economic security systems are financially burdened and are struggling with serious structural problems. Without a doubt, Sweden has become "harder around the edges." Yet the main features of the Swedish welfare state, with its publicly guaranteed and publicly financed safety net for everyone in the country, so far remain intact.

Government and politics Sweden in brief / A political society

Sweden in brief / A political society

Sweden is a constitutional monarchy, in which King Carl XVI Gustaf is head of state, but royal power has long been limited to official and ceremonial functions. The nation's legislature is the Swedish Parliament (Riksdag), with 349 members. Parliamentary elections are held every four years.


The Swedish Parliament. Photo: Melker Dahlstrand

After the 2006 election, twelve years of Social Democratic government ended when the four Alliance parties — the Moderates (formerly Conservatives), Liberals, Center (formerly Agrarians) and Christian Democrats — formed a government. The prime minister is the 42-year chairman of the Moderates.

The Social Democrats, who ruled Sweden for most of the 20th century and enjoyed a uniquely dominant position of power over national policy compared to other Western European countries, turned in one of their worst election performances ever. In the new Parliament they are in opposition along with the Left Party (ex-communists) and the Green Party. After the 2006 election, the Riksdag set a new "world record" because 47 percent of its elected members are women.

Sweden has a history of strong political involvement by ordinary people through its "popular movements" — trade unions, the women's movement, the temperance movement, the sports movement and many more. Election turnout in Sweden has always been very high in international comparisons. In Sweden it is often portrayed as a serious democratic problem that this political involvement has declined in recent decades. Voter turnout has fallen, though only to 80 percent, which is still a high figure in international terms.

Throughout the 20th century, Swedish foreign policy was based on the principle of non-alignment in peacetime, neutrality in wartime. Since 1995 Sweden has been a member of the European Union, and as a consequence of a new world security situation the country's foreign policy doctrine has been partly modified, with Sweden playing a more active role in European security cooperation as well.

Sweden is also very active in international peace efforts, especially through the United Nations, and in support to the Third World.