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Karen Bramson

Karen Bramson (née Adler; born 10 August 1875 in Taarbæk, Denmark and died 26 January 1936 in Paris, France) was a Danish author who wrote novels and plays mostly in Danish or French although many of her writings have been translated into English.

Karen Bramson
BornKaren Adler
(1875-08-10)August 10, 1875
Taarbæk, Denmark
DiedJanuary 26, 1936(1936-01-26) (aged 60)
Paris, France
Resting placethe Père Lachaise Cemetery in Paris
OccupationAuthor
LanguageDanish and French
NationalityDanish
Notable awards
SpouseDr. Louis Bramson
ChildrenMogens Bramson
Relatives
Vera Stanley Alder (niece)

Niels Bohr (third cousin)

Signature
Karen Bramson's grave at the Père Lachaise Cemetery in Paris

Bramson spent her early life in Denmark and her later life in France. She was awarded the Légion d'honneur for her work during the First World War and for her contributions to French literature.

Early life in Denmark

Karen Adler was born on August 10, 1875, in Tårbæk, Denmark with parents Julius Frederick Adler a wealthy cigar merchant in Copenhagen and Dorothea (Thea) Monies[1] a second cousin of the physicist Niels Bohr.[2] She had several siblings, one of which was her elder brother, David Julius Adler. Bramson was apparently a better writer than David, because she would sometimes write David Adler's school essays for him. Karen Adler started writing plays at the age of 12 and at 14, had a play in two acts - "Veninder" (Girlfriends) and "I pension for unge piger" (In a boarding house for young girls) - accepted at the Folketeatret (People's Theatre) in Copenhagen for a fee of 200 Danish Kroner.[3] She had insisted that she should remain anonymous, but the theatre director could not resist giving her name to the local newspaper. Bramson hurriedly withdrew her play and refunded the fee to avoid scandal and her father's wrath, for in 1890s Copenhagen, it was unheard of for a young lady of her class to attract such publicity and get paid for writing a play.[4] In 1893, at the age of 17, she married Louis Bramson (b. 1861 - d 1952). Louis, like Karen, came from a relatively prosperous Danish family, was a doctor and was 15 years older than Karen.[1] In 1895, they had a son, Mogens Bramson. Karen Bramson continued to write and made her début in print with the two plays "Den unge Frue. Mands Vilje" (The young lady - Man's Will) published in 1900 and performed in 1907[5] at the People's Theatre in Copenahgen.

In 1904, Bramson and her husband built a country mansion which they called Solgården (Sun Yard) near the sea in Strøby Egede, Stevns Municipality just south of Copenhagen.[6] They invited artists from different parts of Europe and held plays on a stage they had built there.[7] King Frederick VIII of Denmark is said to have stayed there in 1911 and, in commemoration, is said to have presented Karen with four marble statues of eagles which were placed on the corners of a tower in the building.[8][9][10]

In 1912, Bramson was elected a councillor of Copenhagen Municipality but declined, preferring to concentrate on writing.[11] In 1914, Bramson left Denmark and moved to France in a personal protest against Denmark remaining neutral during the World War I. She was to spend the rest of her life in France.[9]

Later literary career

After Bramson settled permanently in Paris, France at the beginning of the First World War, she wrote mostly in French. During the war, she was attached to the press department of the French Ministry of Foreign Affairs, which tried to create international awareness of the country's situation. Bramson was an enthusiastic writer and propagandist for the French cause and tried to help the plight of French prisoners of war in Germany.[12][13] She was awarded the rank of Chevalier in the Légion d'honneur in 1917 for the work she did during the First World War.[1]

After the war, her greatest triumph was the performance in 1923 of her play "Le Professeur Klenow" at the Theatre de l'Odeon in Paris[14] with actor Poul Reumert in the lead role.[15] Later in 1923 there was a reworked version of her 1902 play, "Den Stærkeste" (The Strongest), as guest performance at the Royal Theatre in Copenhagen. Shortly before, at the same theatre, her play "De evige Fjender" (The Eternal Enemies) with Reumert and the actress Bodil Ipsen in the lead roles met with limited success. However, in June 1924 the same play translated into English with the title "Tiger Cats" and starring Edith Evans,[16] Nicholas Hannen[17] and Robert Loraine[18][19] was performed at the Garrick Theatre and then the Royal Strand Theatre in London, where it was much more successful and ran for 116 performances.[20] "Tiger Cats", directed by David Belasco also ran for 48 performances in the Belasco Theatre on Broadway in New York with Katharine Cornell[21] and Robert Lorraine in the lead roles.[22] Other plays by Karen Bramson performed about this time were "The Strong" at the Forty-Ninth Street Theatre, New York (1924)[23] and in England "Medusa" (1926),[24] "The Godless" (Wyndhams theatre December 1925),[25] "The Enchantress" (The Garrick Theatre April 1926),[26] "The Man they Buried" (The Ambassadors Theatre June 1928[27]) and "The Tower of Babel" (Venturers Society July 1929).[17][20][28] "Tiger Cats" was revived at the Royalty theatre in May 1931 with Edith Evans and Robert Lorraine in the same roles as before.[17] In 1925 she was the first foreign female author to have a play accepted at the Comédie-Française in Paris.[29] Other plays of hers performed in Paris included "Puissance de Roi" (Odéon Theatre),[30] "Des yeux qui s'ouvrent" (also at the Odéon) and "Bonheur" (Ambassadeurs theatre).[17] She was made an Officer in the Légion d'honneur in 1927 because of her contributions to French literature and plays.[31] In 1934 she also received the Tagea Brandt Rejselegat Danish award. Bramson was known in fashionable circles in Paris had a reputation for being a brilliant hostess inviting artists, diplomats and politicians to receptions in her house. For example, she was friends with the poet and diplomat Saint-John Perse (who was awarded the Nobel Prize for Literature), the diplomat Philippe Berthelot, his wife Hélène[3] and the French politician Louis Barthou.[32] Despite her versatile talents, her literary ambitions and a life in the media spotlight, her inner personality was mostly hidden. She disliked giving interviews and was reticent about divulging details of her personal life.[4]

Personal life

Bramson and her husband had one son, Mogens Louis Bramson[33] After 1914, she lived apart from her husband, but had a friendly relationship with him throughout her life. She adored her son Mogens, who was a pilot[33] and aviation engineering consultant. Mogens Bramson lived much of his life in England and played a crucial role in helping Frank Whittle develop the world's first jet engine.[34] Later in his life, Mogens moved to California, USA where he invented a heart lung machine.[35] One source says Karen Bramson's older sister Olga married the Russian Prince Vladimir Orloff.[2][36] Karen's brother David Julius Adler was the father of the author and painter Vera Stanley Alder.

Later life and death

In her final years, she retired from public life and studied spiritualism. She had always loved a cosmopolitan life and travelled throughout Europe staying in various hotels before dying in 1936 of a cerebral hemorrhage[37] in a hotel room in Paris.[38] Her ashes were buried at the Père Lachaise cemetery in Paris.[39][a]

Reception and legacy

Her first plays ("The Young Lady", "Man's Will" in 1900 and "Mothers" in 1901 ) have been described as focussing on the oppression women suffer in marriage and she often explored themes of interpersonal relationships and the battle of the sexes. Deadly love and female masochist tendencies have also been mentioned by reviewers.[1] One newspaper review of her play "Tiger Cats" noted the London audience "...consisting mainly of middle-aged, unmarried women cheered wildly these scenes of sadism."[50] She has also been described as a feminist[11] and a writer of science fiction in the near future.[51] In 1932 she was regarded by some critics as "the most significant figure in Nordic literature since Ibsens time."[52] The opinion of The Times obituary in January 1936 was that she was perhaps more successful as a novelist than a playwright[17] - in particular for her books "Parmi les hommes" (a vast fresco of Europe before and after World War 1 including the curious character of Lenin), "Un seul homme" (an analysis of an English revolutionary), "Nous les barbares" (a study of middle-class life of her day) and "Star" (the story of a young girl and Hollywood).[17]

Works

  • Den unge Frue. Mands Vilje (The Young Lady. Man's Will; 1900, two plays in Danish published together,[53])
  • Mødre (Mothers; 1901, play[54] in Danish also translated into German[55])
  • Den Stærkeste (The Strongest; 1902, play in Danish also translated into English as Professor Klenov,[56] into French[15][57] and Arabic.[58])
  • Det lyriska versdramat Berengaria, Dronning af Danmark (Berengaria, Queen of Denmark, in lyrical verse; 1904, play in Danish[59])
  • Livets Glæde (Life's Joy; 1905,[60] in Danish also translated into Finnish[61])
  • Vore Kælebørn (skrevet af et af dem) (Our Pet Children (written by one of them); 1905, play four acts in Danish[62])
  • Dr Morel (1906, novel in Danish, also translated into English by David Stanley-Alder[63] as The Case of Dr. Morel,,[64] Russian,[65] Bulgarian,[66] and self-translated into French.[67])
  • Pengene (The Money; 1908, novel in Danish[68]),
  • Ærtehalm (Peas in a Pod; 1909, play in Danish by Karen Bramson and Gustav Wied[69])
  • Lykke (Happiness; 1910, in Danish[70])
  • samt Kongemagt (The King; 1911, play[71] in Danish also translated into German and Russian[72])
  • Mennesker af vor Tid (People of our Time; 1916, novel[73] in Danish also into French by Karen Bramson as Une femme libre[74])
  • Det store Drama (The Great Drama; 1922,[75] novel in Danish also translated into French as Parmi les hommes)
  • De evige Fjender(The Eternal Enemies; 1923, play in Danish also translated into English as Tiger Cats and into French as les félines[20][22])
  • Des yeux qui s'ouvrent (Eyes that Open; 1925, play in French[15])
  • The Godless (1925 play translated into English[20])
  • Le dictateur (The Dictator; 1925 play in French [76])
  • The Man They Buried (1928, comedy translated into English by Bertha Murrey, 1928[20])
  • La femme fatale (1926, in French, also translated into English as Medusa or The Enchantress[20][77]
  • The Tower of Babel (1929, play[20])
  • Nous, les barbares... (We the Barbarians ...; 1929,[78] novel in French, also translated into Spanish[79])
  • Théâtre (1929–30; Compendium of 12 of Karen Bramson's plays in French in four volumes: L'argent {une famille-l'enfer-La tour de Babel}, L'amour {Le professeur Klenow-Méduse-Le Bonheur}, La foi {L'orgueilleux-L'homme qui a compris-Les yeux qui s'ouvrent} and La haine {Le dictateur-Les félines-Depuis l'aurore des temps}[80])
  • Men (1930[81])
  • Une amoureuse (A Lover; 1930,[82] in French, also translated into Spanish[83])
  • Une nuit d'amour (A Night of Love; 1931,[84] in French also translated into Norwegian[85])
  • Un seul homme (One Man; 1932, novel in French[86])
  • En Nat (One Night; 1932, novel in Danish[87])
  • Star (1933, novel in French[88])
  • Lueur dans nos ténèbres (Light Among our Shadows; 1935, novel in French[89])

Notes

  1. ^ There is no printed biography of Karen Bramson. She is mentioned in some dictionaries and encyclopaedias of Danish authors.[1][4][5][40][41][42][43][44][45][46][47][48][49]

External links

References

  1. ^ a b c d e Bech, Svend Cedergreen, ed. (1979). Dansk Biografisk Leksikon 3. udgave [Danish biographical handbook] (in Danish) (third ed.). Copenhagen, Denmark: Gyldendal. ISBN 978-8700055513.
  2. ^ a b Brenner, Otto (1927). Leksikon over danske familier [Encyclopaedia of Danish families] (in Danish). Copenhagen, Denmark: The Personal Institute. OCLC 482088191.
  3. ^ a b Holst, Holger Christian (4 May 2000). [Young Alexis Leger/Saint-John Perse as seen by Karen Bramson]. Colloque international Postérités de Saint-John Perse (in French and English). Aix Marseilles University. Archived from the original on 14 August 2016. Retrieved 12 May 2015.
  4. ^ a b c Jensen, Marianne Majgaard (2003). "Karen Bramson (1875 - 1936)". Dansk kvindebiografisk leksikon (Danish women's autobiographical library) (in Danish). KVINFO. Retrieved 6 June 2015.
  5. ^ a b Engelstoft, Povl (1920). Dahl, Svend (ed.). Dansk Biografisk Haandleksikon Bind 1 [Danish biographical handbook first volume] (in Danish). Copenhagen, Denmark: Nordisk Forlag. p. 210.
  6. ^ "Solgardsparken in Stroeby Egede". Visit Denmark. Danish Tourist Office. 2015. Retrieved 20 May 2015.
  7. ^ "Solgårdsparken, Strøby Egede, Historiske billeder" [Solgards park, Stroby Egede, Historic images] (in Danish). Solgard Park, Strøby Egede. 2015. Retrieved 20 May 2015.
  8. ^ "Auction 786; The Departments of Decorative Art". Copenhagen, Denmark: Bruun Rasmussen Antiques. April 2008. p. 7. Retrieved 20 May 2015.
  9. ^ a b "Historien bag Solgårdsparken" [The History of Solgards Park] (in Danish). Solgard Park, Strøby Egede. 2015. Retrieved 20 May 2015.
  10. ^ "Solgårdsparken" [Solgards park] (in Danish). Historical atlas. Retrieved 20 May 2015.
  11. ^ a b "Suffragette Refuses Office and Gains Literary Honors. Mmme Bronson Expected to Raise Women's Standards". The Evening Independent. St. Petersburg, Florida, USA. 16 March 1912. Retrieved 8 June 2015.
  12. ^ "Says Germany Spreads Phtsisis Among Prisoners; Tuberculous Victims Deliberately Mixed with Others, Mme. Bramson Alleges". The New York Times. New York, USA. 24 September 1916. Retrieved 6 June 2015.
  13. ^ "Bramson Karen (1875-1936)" (in French). Amis et Passionés du Père-Lachese; Écrivains - Poètes - Littérateurs; 87eme division (Columbarium). 16 March 2008. Retrieved 21 May 2015.
  14. ^ (2015) Répertoire Odéon Théâtre de l'Europe, Paris, Retrieved 3 June 2015
  15. ^ a b c "Les Relevés de mises en scènes écrites" [List of written productions] (in French). collections de l'Association de la Régie Théâtrale. 23 October 2008. Retrieved 6 June 2015.
  16. ^ Worsley, Luccy (15 September 2014). "Dame Edith Evans". The Times Great Women's Lives: A Celebration in Obituaries. United Kingdom: The History Press. ISBN 9780750962346.
  17. ^ a b c d e f "Obituary: Fru Karen Bramson". The Times. 1936-01-28. p. 13.
  18. ^ Senelick, Laurence (September 2013). Theatre Arts on Acting. United Kingdom: Routledge. p. 316. ISBN 9781134723751.
  19. ^ Liggera, Lanayre D. (August 2013). The Life of Robert Loraine: The Stage, the Sky, and George Bernard Shaw. USA: University of Delaware Press. p. 181. ISBN 9781611494594.
  20. ^ a b c d e f g Wearing, J.P. (2014). The London Stage 1920-1929: A Calendar of Productions, Performers, and Personnel (2nd ed.). London, UK: Rowman & Littlefield Education. p. 313. ISBN 978-0810893016. OCLC 863695327.
  21. ^ Sicherman, Barbara; Green, Carol Hurd (January 1986). Notable American Women: A Biographical Dictionary, Volume 4: The Modern Period. USA: Harvard University Press. p. 168. ISBN 9780674627338.
  22. ^ a b "Tiger Cats". The Internet Broadway Database. 2015. Retrieved 6 June 2015.
  23. ^ The ERA Special Correspondent (1924-03-12). "The Drama in America - "The Strong"". The ERA. p. 9.
  24. ^ "Medusa, a new play by Karen Bramson". Folkestone, Hythe, Sandgate & Cheriton Herald. 1926-03-06. p. 6.
  25. ^ E., M. (1925-12-16). "A Stage Atheist - Religious Theme Badly Handled". Daily Herald. p. 1.
  26. ^ "The Devil and All". Sporting Times. 1926-04-10. p. 7.
  27. ^ "The Theatres - Two queer plays". Truth. 1928-06-13. p. 1131.
  28. ^ Adller, F. (8 March 1926). "Theatre collections: Medusa (La Femme Fatale)". University of Kent, UK, Special Collections. the Pleasure Gardens Theatre, Folkestone, Kent, England. Retrieved 10 June 2015.
  29. ^ "Mort de l 'écrivain danois Mme Karen-Bramson" [Death of the Danish author Mrs Karen Bramson]. Journal du Loiret (in French). 28 January 1936. p. 1.
  30. ^ Percival (1912-03-03). "Gossip from the gay city - 'Puissance de Roi' a new star". The Referee.
  31. ^ Adller, F. (2013). "Karen Bramson, Dansk forfatter" [Karen Bramson, Danish author] (in Danish). Kendtes gravsted (Celebrity burials). Retrieved 6 June 2015.
  32. ^ "Nécrologie - Les obsèques du Mme Karen Bramson" [Obituary - Funeral of Mrs Karen Bramson]. Le Figaro (in French). Paris, France. 1 February 1936.
  33. ^ a b Mulder, Rob J.M., (24 November 2011) Skywriting - Mr. Bramson above Christiana (Oslo) European Airlines, reprinted from original article in "Flight" magazine 21 June 1923, Retrieved 13 May 2015
  34. ^ Meher-Homji, Cyrus B. (2002). "Enabling the Turbojet Revolution – The Bramson Report" (PDF). 42 (1). American Society of Mechanical Engineers: 16–20. Retrieved 16 July 2015. {{cite journal}}: Cite journal requires |journal= (help)
  35. ^ "the Bramson lung". Independent. Long Beach, California. 23 August 1972. p. 27. Retrieved 16 July 2015. "..The instrument, which assists the heart and lungs, is known as the Bramson lung, named for its designer, Mogens L. Bramson, an engineer. Although the device warms blood and enriches it with oxygen, 50 to 60 per cent of the patient's blood can still be pumped by the natural heart. The patient thus retains his natural pulse. Dr. J. Donald Hill of Presbyterian Hospital of Pacific Medical Center, San Francisco, says the Bramson lung buys time for damaged lungs to heal. Standard heart-lung machines may lead to blood damage when used for longer than six hours..."
  36. ^ "Niece of Prince and Princess". Western Mail and South Wales News. Cardiff, Wales. 1 December 1938.
  37. ^ "The death has occurred in Paris from cerebral haemorrhage of Madame Karen- Bramson, the Danish writer". The Dundee Evening Telegraph. Angus, Scotland. 28 January 1936. p. 6.
  38. ^ "Mme Karen Bramson grand écrivain danois est morte à Paris" [Mrs Karen Bramson, the great Danish author has died in Paris] (PDF). Le Petit Dauphinois (in French). Grenoble, France. 28 January 1936. Retrieved 6 June 2015.
  39. ^ Beyern, Bertrand (2011). Guide des tombes d'hommes célèbres [Guide to the graves of famous men]. Le Cherche Midi. ISBN 978-2749121697.
  40. ^ Kraks Blå Bog [Kraks Blue Book] (in Danish). the "Who's Who of Denmark. Copenhagen, Denmark: Krak. 1921. OCLC 219836555.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: others (link)
  41. ^ Lind, Th. (1915). Gyldendals forfatter-lexikon [Gyldendals author encyclopaedia] (in Danish). Copenhagen, Denmark: Gyldendal. OCLC 465963608.
  42. ^ Danske dramatikere; en fortegnelse udgivet af Danske dramatikeres forbund over medlemmernes arbejder [Danish playwrights; a list published by the Danish playwrights Association of Members work] (in Danish). Copenhagen, Denmark: Jørgensen A Co. 1916. OCLC 462755351.
  43. ^ Jørgensen, Harmer; Henning, Thomas (1974). Gyldendals litteraturleksikon [Gyldendals literary encyclopaedia] (in Danish). Copenhagen, Denmark: Gyldendal. ISBN 9788700366534. OCLC 2496580.
  44. ^ Nunnally Hamilton, Tiina (1979). Kvindelige danske forfattere 1820-1910 [Danish women authors 1820-1910] (in Danish). Ballerup Bibliotekscentralen. ISBN 87-552-0582-8.
  45. ^ Brostrøm, Torben (1981). Danske digtere i det 20. århundrede [Danish poets of the 20th Century] (in Danish). Copenhagen, Denmark: Gad. ISBN 9788712174523. OCLC 58579575.
  46. ^ Jørgensen, Aage (1989). Dansk litteraturhistorisk bibliografi 1967-1986 [Danish literary bibliography 1967-1986] (in Danish). Centre for Undervisning og Kulturformidling. Copenhage, Denmark: Akademisk forlag, Dansklærerforeningen.
  47. ^ Larsen, Jytte, ed. (2000). Dansk kvindebiografisk leksikon [Danish Women's Biographical Encyclopedia] (in Danish). Copenhagen, Denmark: Rosinante. ISBN 9788773579763. OCLC 48031935.
  48. ^ Ellehauge, Martin (1933). Det danske skuespil efter verdenskrigen [Danish drama after the war] (in Danish). Copenhagen, Denmark: Levin & Munksgaard. pp. 21–23. ASIN B000X7QK40. OCLC 463332205.
  49. ^ Reumert, Poul Hagen (1940). Masker og mennesker [Masks and humans] (in Danish). Copenhagen, Denmark: Gyldendalske boghandel nordisk forlag. pp. 134–142. OCLC 7186690.
  50. ^ Wearing, J. P. (2014). The London Stage 1920-1929: A Calendar of Productions, Performers, and Personnel. Plymouth, UK: Rowman & Littlefield. p. 308. ISBN 978-0-8108-9301-6.
  51. ^ "Bramson, Karen". The Encyclopedia of Science Fiction. 25 October 2014. Retrieved 3 June 2015.
  52. ^ "News and Views of Interest to Women in Professional and Domestic Fields - In Nordic Literature" (PDF). The New York Sun. 11 February 1932. Retrieved 6 June 2015.
  53. ^ Bramson, Karen (1900). Den unge Frue. Mands Vilje [The Young Lady. Man’s Will; two plays] (in Danish). Copenhagen, Denmark: To skuespil, Gyldendalske boghandels forlag (F. Hegel & søn). ASIN B000WHFDTE. OCLC 493768937.
  54. ^ Bramson, Karen (1901). Mødre skuespil i tre akter [Mothers; Play in three acts] (in Danish). Copenhagen, Denmark: Gyldendal. ASIN B000WHGO4M. OCLC 248764352.
  55. ^ Bramson, Karen (c. 1901). Mutter : Schauspiel [Mother : Play] (in German). Translated by Otto Hamburger. Nürnberg : Frankfurter. OCLC 248764352.
  56. ^ "The Strong". Internet Broadway Database. 2015. Retrieved 13 May 2015.
  57. ^ Lavauzelle, Jacky (17 February 2015). "Karen Bramson – Le Professeur Klenow : La laideur de l'amour" [Karen Bramson - Professor Klenow - the ugliness of love] (in French). Artgitato. Retrieved 26 May 2015.
  58. ^ Bramson, Karen. al-Ustādh Klinūv [Professor Klenov] (in Arabic). Translated by Ṣalāḥ al-Dīn Kāmil. OCLC 30987207.
  59. ^ Bramson, Karen (1904). Det lyriska versdramat Berengaria, Dronning af Danmark [Berengaria, Queen of Denmark; drama in lyrical verse] (in Danish). Copenhagen, Denmark. ASIN B000WHK6MS. OCLC 465527302.
  60. ^ Bramson, Karen (1905). Livets Glæde [Life's Joy] (in Danish). Copenhagen, Denmark: Det Schulbotheske forlag. ASIN B000WHDE7M. OCLC 557484997.
  61. ^ Bramson, Karen (1908). Elämän iloa ... [Life's Joy] (in Finnish). Helsinki, Finland. OCLC 467958855.
  62. ^ Jensen, Niels (30 April 2005). "bog guide Danske litteraturepriser" [Book guide, Danish literary prizes] (in Danish). Retrieved 19 June 2015.)
  63. ^ "Books received". Truth. 1927-04-07. p. 678.
  64. ^ Bramson, Karen (1926). The Case of Dr. Morel. Translated from Danish into English by the author's brother David Stanley Alder. London, UK: A.M. Philpot. ASIN B000WHK6NM. OCLC 557484978. Also published in 1950 in English as the "Sins of a Paris Doctor"
  65. ^ Breamson, Karen (1909). Дѣло Доктора Мореля (in Russian). Anna Vasil'evna Ganzen; Petr Gotfridovič Ganzen. St. Petersburg, Russia: A.F. Marks. OCLC 24019022.
  66. ^ Bramson, Karen (1921). Dĕloto Doktor Morel (in Bulgarian). Biblioteka "Otbrani romani". Sofia, Bulgaria. OCLC 873847760.
  67. ^ Bramson, Karen (1919). Un révolté [A revolutionary] (in French). Translated from Danish into French by the author. Paris, France: E. Fasquelle. ASIN B0018HCNFY. OCLC 491617501.
  68. ^ Bramson, Karen (1908). Pengene : Fortælling [The Money : a novel] (in Danish). Copenhagen, Denmark: Schubothe.
  69. ^ Bramson, Karen; Wied, Gustav (1909). Ærtehalm [Peas in a Pod] (in Danish). Copenhagen, Denmark: Nabu Press. ISBN 9781246478600.
  70. ^ Bramson, Karen (1910). Lykke. Skuespil i tre Akter [Happiness, play in 3 acts] (in Danish). ASIN B000WHK6TQ.
  71. ^ Bramson, Karen (1911). Kongemagt. Skuespil i fire Akter [The King; drama in four acts] (in Danish). Copenhagen, Denmark: Gyldendal. ASIN B000WHK6RI.
  72. ^ Bramson, Karen (1912). U morja [The King] (in Russian). Anna Vasil'evna Ganzen; Petr Gotfridovič Ganzen; Alvilde Prydz. St. Petersburg, Russia: A.F. Marks. OCLC 71459709.
  73. ^ Bramson, Karen (1916). Mennesker af vor Tid [People of our Time] (in Danish). Copenhagen, Denmark: Hasselbalch. OCLC 464870271.
  74. ^ "Une femme libre" [A free woman]. Le Temps (in French). 31 August 1917. Retrieved 12 May 2015.
  75. ^ Bramson, Karen (1922). Det store Drama [The Great Drama] (in Danish). Copenhagen, Denmark: Steen Hasselbachs Forlag. ASIN B00CMG7VSE.
  76. ^ Bramson, Karen (1925). Le Dictateur [The Dictator] (in French). Paris, France: Les Oeuvres libres. ASIN B000WQOL1G. OCLC 28863461.
  77. ^ Theatre collections: record view, Medusa (La Femme Fatale) University of Kent, Information Services - Special Collections, Retrieved 26 May 2015
  78. ^ Bramson, Karen (1929). Nous, les Barbares...' [We the Barbarians ...] (in French). Paris, France: Ernst Flammarion. ASIN B0018HCNEK.
  79. ^ Bramson, Karen (1931). Nosotros los bárbaros [We the barbarians ...] (in Spanish). Madrid, Spain: Zeus. OCLC 807481540.
  80. ^ Bramson, Karen (1929). Théâtre [Theatre] (in French). Compendium of 12 of Karen Bramsons plays in French in four volumes. Paris, France: Ernst Flammarion. ISBN 9781278510798.
  81. ^ Bramson, Karen (1930). Men. London, UK: Chapman & Hall.
  82. ^ Bramson, Karen (1930). Une amoureuse [A Lover] (in French). Paris, France: Ernst Flammarion. OCLC 431804761.
  83. ^ Bramson, Karen (1932). Una enamorada [A lover] (in Spanish). Translated into Spanish by Francisco Pina. Madrid, Spain. OCLC 431804761.
  84. ^ Bramson, Karen (1931). Une nuit d'amour [A night of Love] (in French). Paris, France: Ernest Flammarion. ASIN B0018HHQ8S.
  85. ^ Bramson, Karen (1952). En kjærlighetsnatt [A night of Love] (in Norwegian). translated into Norwegian by Trygve Width. Series Alle tiders forfattere. OCLC 467958823.
  86. ^ Bramson, Karen (1932). Un seul homme [One man] (in French). Paris, France: Ernest Flammarion. ASIN B0018HJQ8Q.
  87. ^ Bramson, Karen (1932). En Nat. Roman [One night. A novel] (in Danish). Copenhage, Denmark: Koppel. ASIN B000WHDEBI.
  88. ^ Bramson, Karen (1933). Star (in French). Paris, France: Ernst Flammarion. ASIN B0018HEQXG.
  89. ^ Bramson, Karen (1935). Lueur dans nos ténèbres [Light Among our Shadows] (in French). Paris, France: Ernst Flammarion. ASIN B0018HGLMU.

karen, bramson, née, adler, born, august, 1875, taarbæk, denmark, died, january, 1936, paris, france, danish, author, wrote, novels, plays, mostly, danish, french, although, many, writings, have, been, translated, into, english, bornkaren, adler, 1875, august,. Karen Bramson nee Adler born 10 August 1875 in Taarbaek Denmark and died 26 January 1936 in Paris France was a Danish author who wrote novels and plays mostly in Danish or French although many of her writings have been translated into English Karen BramsonBornKaren Adler 1875 08 10 August 10 1875Taarbaek DenmarkDiedJanuary 26 1936 1936 01 26 aged 60 Paris FranceResting placethe Pere Lachaise Cemetery in ParisOccupationAuthorLanguageDanish and FrenchNationalityDanishNotable awardsLegion d honneur 1827 Officier Tagea Brandt Rejselegat 1934SpouseDr Louis BramsonChildrenMogens BramsonRelativesVera Stanley Alder niece Niels Bohr third cousin SignatureKaren Bramson s grave at the Pere Lachaise Cemetery in Paris Bramson spent her early life in Denmark and her later life in France She was awarded the Legion d honneur for her work during the First World War and for her contributions to French literature Contents 1 Early life in Denmark 2 Later literary career 3 Personal life 4 Later life and death 5 Reception and legacy 6 Works 7 Notes 8 External links 9 ReferencesEarly life in Denmark EditKaren Adler was born on August 10 1875 in Tarbaek Denmark with parents Julius Frederick Adler a wealthy cigar merchant in Copenhagen and Dorothea Thea Monies 1 a second cousin of the physicist Niels Bohr 2 She had several siblings one of which was her elder brother David Julius Adler Bramson was apparently a better writer than David because she would sometimes write David Adler s school essays for him Karen Adler started writing plays at the age of 12 and at 14 had a play in two acts Veninder Girlfriends and I pension for unge piger In a boarding house for young girls accepted at the Folketeatret People s Theatre in Copenhagen for a fee of 200 Danish Kroner 3 She had insisted that she should remain anonymous but the theatre director could not resist giving her name to the local newspaper Bramson hurriedly withdrew her play and refunded the fee to avoid scandal and her father s wrath for in 1890s Copenhagen it was unheard of for a young lady of her class to attract such publicity and get paid for writing a play 4 In 1893 at the age of 17 she married Louis Bramson b 1861 d 1952 Louis like Karen came from a relatively prosperous Danish family was a doctor and was 15 years older than Karen 1 In 1895 they had a son Mogens Bramson Karen Bramson continued to write and made her debut in print with the two plays Den unge Frue Mands Vilje The young lady Man s Will published in 1900 and performed in 1907 5 at the People s Theatre in Copenahgen In 1904 Bramson and her husband built a country mansion which they called Solgarden Sun Yard near the sea in Stroby Egede Stevns Municipality just south of Copenhagen 6 They invited artists from different parts of Europe and held plays on a stage they had built there 7 King Frederick VIII of Denmark is said to have stayed there in 1911 and in commemoration is said to have presented Karen with four marble statues of eagles which were placed on the corners of a tower in the building 8 9 10 In 1912 Bramson was elected a councillor of Copenhagen Municipality but declined preferring to concentrate on writing 11 In 1914 Bramson left Denmark and moved to France in a personal protest against Denmark remaining neutral during the World War I She was to spend the rest of her life in France 9 Later literary career EditAfter Bramson settled permanently in Paris France at the beginning of the First World War she wrote mostly in French During the war she was attached to the press department of the French Ministry of Foreign Affairs which tried to create international awareness of the country s situation Bramson was an enthusiastic writer and propagandist for the French cause and tried to help the plight of French prisoners of war in Germany 12 13 She was awarded the rank of Chevalier in the Legion d honneur in 1917 for the work she did during the First World War 1 After the war her greatest triumph was the performance in 1923 of her play Le Professeur Klenow at the Theatre de l Odeon in Paris 14 with actor Poul Reumert in the lead role 15 Later in 1923 there was a reworked version of her 1902 play Den Staerkeste The Strongest as guest performance at the Royal Theatre in Copenhagen Shortly before at the same theatre her play De evige Fjender The Eternal Enemies with Reumert and the actress Bodil Ipsen in the lead roles met with limited success However in June 1924 the same play translated into English with the title Tiger Cats and starring Edith Evans 16 Nicholas Hannen 17 and Robert Loraine 18 19 was performed at the Garrick Theatre and then the Royal Strand Theatre in London where it was much more successful and ran for 116 performances 20 Tiger Cats directed by David Belasco also ran for 48 performances in the Belasco Theatre on Broadway in New York with Katharine Cornell 21 and Robert Lorraine in the lead roles 22 Other plays by Karen Bramson performed about this time were The Strong at the Forty Ninth Street Theatre New York 1924 23 and in England Medusa 1926 24 The Godless Wyndhams theatre December 1925 25 The Enchantress The Garrick Theatre April 1926 26 The Man they Buried The Ambassadors Theatre June 1928 27 and The Tower of Babel Venturers Society July 1929 17 20 28 Tiger Cats was revived at the Royalty theatre in May 1931 with Edith Evans and Robert Lorraine in the same roles as before 17 In 1925 she was the first foreign female author to have a play accepted at the Comedie Francaise in Paris 29 Other plays of hers performed in Paris included Puissance de Roi Odeon Theatre 30 Des yeux qui s ouvrent also at the Odeon and Bonheur Ambassadeurs theatre 17 She was made an Officer in the Legion d honneur in 1927 because of her contributions to French literature and plays 31 In 1934 she also received the Tagea Brandt Rejselegat Danish award Bramson was known in fashionable circles in Paris had a reputation for being a brilliant hostess inviting artists diplomats and politicians to receptions in her house For example she was friends with the poet and diplomat Saint John Perse who was awarded the Nobel Prize for Literature the diplomat Philippe Berthelot his wife Helene 3 and the French politician Louis Barthou 32 Despite her versatile talents her literary ambitions and a life in the media spotlight her inner personality was mostly hidden She disliked giving interviews and was reticent about divulging details of her personal life 4 Personal life EditBramson and her husband had one son Mogens Louis Bramson 33 After 1914 she lived apart from her husband but had a friendly relationship with him throughout her life She adored her son Mogens who was a pilot 33 and aviation engineering consultant Mogens Bramson lived much of his life in England and played a crucial role in helping Frank Whittle develop the world s first jet engine 34 Later in his life Mogens moved to California USA where he invented a heart lung machine 35 One source says Karen Bramson s older sister Olga married the Russian Prince Vladimir Orloff 2 36 Karen s brother David Julius Adler was the father of the author and painter Vera Stanley Alder Later life and death EditIn her final years she retired from public life and studied spiritualism She had always loved a cosmopolitan life and travelled throughout Europe staying in various hotels before dying in 1936 of a cerebral hemorrhage 37 in a hotel room in Paris 38 Her ashes were buried at the Pere Lachaise cemetery in Paris 39 a Reception and legacy EditHer first plays The Young Lady Man s Will in 1900 and Mothers in 1901 have been described as focussing on the oppression women suffer in marriage and she often explored themes of interpersonal relationships and the battle of the sexes Deadly love and female masochist tendencies have also been mentioned by reviewers 1 One newspaper review of her play Tiger Cats noted the London audience consisting mainly of middle aged unmarried women cheered wildly these scenes of sadism 50 She has also been described as a feminist 11 and a writer of science fiction in the near future 51 In 1932 she was regarded by some critics as the most significant figure in Nordic literature since Ibsens time 52 The opinion of The Times obituary in January 1936 was that she was perhaps more successful as a novelist than a playwright 17 in particular for her books Parmi les hommes a vast fresco of Europe before and after World War 1 including the curious character of Lenin Un seul homme an analysis of an English revolutionary Nous les barbares a study of middle class life of her day and Star the story of a young girl and Hollywood 17 Works EditDen unge Frue Mands Vilje The Young Lady Man s Will 1900 two plays in Danish published together 53 Modre Mothers 1901 play 54 in Danish also translated into German 55 Den Staerkeste The Strongest 1902 play in Danish also translated into English as Professor Klenov 56 into French 15 57 and Arabic 58 Det lyriska versdramat Berengaria Dronning af Danmark Berengaria Queen of Denmark in lyrical verse 1904 play in Danish 59 Livets Glaede Life s Joy 1905 60 in Danish also translated into Finnish 61 Vore Kaeleborn skrevet af et af dem Our Pet Children written by one of them 1905 play four acts in Danish 62 Dr Morel 1906 novel in Danish also translated into English by David Stanley Alder 63 as The Case of Dr Morel 64 Russian 65 Bulgarian 66 and self translated into French 67 Pengene The Money 1908 novel in Danish 68 AErtehalm Peas in a Pod 1909 play in Danish by Karen Bramson and Gustav Wied 69 Lykke Happiness 1910 in Danish 70 samt Kongemagt The King 1911 play 71 in Danish also translated into German and Russian 72 Mennesker af vor Tid People of our Time 1916 novel 73 in Danish also into French by Karen Bramson as Une femme libre 74 Det store Drama The Great Drama 1922 75 novel in Danish also translated into French as Parmi les hommes De evige Fjender The Eternal Enemies 1923 play in Danish also translated into English as Tiger Cats and into French as les felines 20 22 Des yeux qui s ouvrent Eyes that Open 1925 play in French 15 The Godless 1925 play translated into English 20 Le dictateur The Dictator 1925 play in French 76 The Man They Buried 1928 comedy translated into English by Bertha Murrey 1928 20 La femme fatale 1926 in French also translated into English as Medusa or The Enchantress 20 77 The Tower of Babel 1929 play 20 Nous les barbares We the Barbarians 1929 78 novel in French also translated into Spanish 79 Theatre 1929 30 Compendium of 12 of Karen Bramson s plays in French in four volumes L argent une famille l enfer La tour de Babel L amour Le professeur Klenow Meduse Le Bonheur La foi L orgueilleux L homme qui a compris Les yeux qui s ouvrent and La haine Le dictateur Les felines Depuis l aurore des temps 80 Men 1930 81 Une amoureuse A Lover 1930 82 in French also translated into Spanish 83 Une nuit d amour A Night of Love 1931 84 in French also translated into Norwegian 85 Un seul homme One Man 1932 novel in French 86 En Nat One Night 1932 novel in Danish 87 Star 1933 novel in French 88 Lueur dans nos tenebres Light Among our Shadows 1935 novel in French 89 Notes Edit There is no printed biography of Karen Bramson She is mentioned in some dictionaries and encyclopaedias of Danish authors 1 4 5 40 41 42 43 44 45 46 47 48 49 External links EditPersonal papers of Mogens Bramson held at Churchill Archives Centre CambridgeReferences Edit a b c d e Bech Svend Cedergreen ed 1979 Dansk Biografisk Leksikon 3 udgave Danish biographical handbook in Danish third ed Copenhagen Denmark Gyldendal ISBN 978 8700055513 a b Brenner Otto 1927 Leksikon over danske familier Encyclopaedia of Danish families in Danish Copenhagen Denmark The Personal Institute OCLC 482088191 a b Holst Holger Christian 4 May 2000 Le jeune Alexis Leger Saint John Perse vu par Karen Bramson Young Alexis Leger Saint John Perse as seen by Karen Bramson Colloque international Posterites de Saint John Perse in French and English Aix Marseilles University Archived from the original on 14 August 2016 Retrieved 12 May 2015 a b c Jensen Marianne Majgaard 2003 Karen Bramson 1875 1936 Dansk kvindebiografisk leksikon Danish women s autobiographical library in Danish KVINFO Retrieved 6 June 2015 a b Engelstoft Povl 1920 Dahl Svend ed Dansk Biografisk Haandleksikon Bind 1 Danish biographical handbook first volume in Danish Copenhagen Denmark Nordisk Forlag p 210 Solgardsparken in Stroeby Egede Visit Denmark Danish Tourist Office 2015 Retrieved 20 May 2015 Solgardsparken Stroby Egede Historiske billeder Solgards park Stroby Egede Historic images in Danish Solgard Park Stroby Egede 2015 Retrieved 20 May 2015 Auction 786 The Departments of Decorative Art Copenhagen Denmark Bruun Rasmussen Antiques April 2008 p 7 Retrieved 20 May 2015 a b Historien bag Solgardsparken The History of Solgards Park in Danish Solgard Park Stroby Egede 2015 Retrieved 20 May 2015 Solgardsparken Solgards park in Danish Historical atlas Retrieved 20 May 2015 a b Suffragette Refuses Office and Gains Literary Honors Mmme Bronson Expected to Raise Women s Standards The Evening Independent St Petersburg Florida USA 16 March 1912 Retrieved 8 June 2015 Says Germany Spreads Phtsisis Among Prisoners Tuberculous Victims Deliberately Mixed with Others Mme Bramson Alleges The New York Times New York USA 24 September 1916 Retrieved 6 June 2015 Bramson Karen 1875 1936 in French Amis et Passiones du Pere Lachese Ecrivains Poetes Litterateurs 87eme division Columbarium 16 March 2008 Retrieved 21 May 2015 2015 Repertoire Odeon Theatre de l Europe Paris Retrieved 3 June 2015 a b c Les Releves de mises en scenes ecrites List of written productions in French collections de l Association de la Regie Theatrale 23 October 2008 Retrieved 6 June 2015 Worsley Luccy 15 September 2014 Dame Edith Evans The Times Great Women s Lives A Celebration in Obituaries United Kingdom The History Press ISBN 9780750962346 a b c d e f Obituary Fru Karen Bramson The Times 1936 01 28 p 13 Senelick Laurence September 2013 Theatre Arts on Acting United Kingdom Routledge p 316 ISBN 9781134723751 Liggera Lanayre D August 2013 The Life of Robert Loraine The Stage the Sky and George Bernard Shaw USA University of Delaware Press p 181 ISBN 9781611494594 a b c d e f g Wearing J P 2014 The London Stage 1920 1929 A Calendar of Productions Performers and Personnel 2nd ed London UK Rowman amp Littlefield Education p 313 ISBN 978 0810893016 OCLC 863695327 Sicherman Barbara Green Carol Hurd January 1986 Notable American Women A Biographical Dictionary Volume 4 The Modern Period USA Harvard University Press p 168 ISBN 9780674627338 a b Tiger Cats The Internet Broadway Database 2015 Retrieved 6 June 2015 The ERA Special Correspondent 1924 03 12 The Drama in America The Strong The ERA p 9 Medusa a new play by Karen Bramson Folkestone Hythe Sandgate amp Cheriton Herald 1926 03 06 p 6 E M 1925 12 16 A Stage Atheist Religious Theme Badly Handled Daily Herald p 1 The Devil and All Sporting Times 1926 04 10 p 7 The Theatres Two queer plays Truth 1928 06 13 p 1131 Adller F 8 March 1926 Theatre collections Medusa La Femme Fatale University of Kent UK Special Collections the Pleasure Gardens Theatre Folkestone Kent England Retrieved 10 June 2015 Mort de l ecrivain danois Mme Karen Bramson Death of the Danish author Mrs Karen Bramson Journal du Loiret in French 28 January 1936 p 1 Percival 1912 03 03 Gossip from the gay city Puissance de Roi a new star The Referee Adller F 2013 Karen Bramson Dansk forfatter Karen Bramson Danish author in Danish Kendtes gravsted Celebrity burials Retrieved 6 June 2015 Necrologie Les obseques du Mme Karen Bramson Obituary Funeral of Mrs Karen Bramson Le Figaro in French Paris France 1 February 1936 a b Mulder Rob J M 24 November 2011 Skywriting Mr Bramson above Christiana Oslo European Airlines reprinted from original article in Flight magazine 21 June 1923 Retrieved 13 May 2015 Meher Homji Cyrus B 2002 Enabling the Turbojet Revolution The Bramson Report PDF 42 1 American Society of Mechanical Engineers 16 20 Retrieved 16 July 2015 a href Template Cite journal html title Template Cite journal cite journal a Cite journal requires journal help the Bramson lung Independent Long Beach California 23 August 1972 p 27 Retrieved 16 July 2015 The instrument which assists the heart and lungs is known as the Bramson lung named for its designer Mogens L Bramson an engineer Although the device warms blood and enriches it with oxygen 50 to 60 per cent of the patient s blood can still be pumped by the natural heart The patient thus retains his natural pulse Dr J Donald Hill of Presbyterian Hospital of Pacific Medical Center San Francisco says the Bramson lung buys time for damaged lungs to heal Standard heart lung machines may lead to blood damage when used for longer than six hours Niece of Prince and Princess Western Mail and South Wales News Cardiff Wales 1 December 1938 The death has occurred in Paris from cerebral haemorrhage of Madame Karen Bramson the Danish writer The Dundee Evening Telegraph Angus Scotland 28 January 1936 p 6 Mme Karen Bramson grand ecrivain danois est morte a Paris Mrs Karen Bramson the great Danish author has died in Paris PDF Le Petit Dauphinois in French Grenoble France 28 January 1936 Retrieved 6 June 2015 Beyern Bertrand 2011 Guide des tombes d hommes celebres Guide to the graves of famous men Le Cherche Midi ISBN 978 2749121697 Kraks Bla Bog Kraks Blue Book in Danish the Who s Who of Denmark Copenhagen Denmark Krak 1921 OCLC 219836555 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint others link Lind Th 1915 Gyldendals forfatter lexikon Gyldendals author encyclopaedia in Danish Copenhagen Denmark Gyldendal OCLC 465963608 Danske dramatikere en fortegnelse udgivet af Danske dramatikeres forbund over medlemmernes arbejder Danish playwrights a list published by the Danish playwrights Association of Members work in Danish Copenhagen Denmark Jorgensen A Co 1916 OCLC 462755351 Jorgensen Harmer Henning Thomas 1974 Gyldendals litteraturleksikon Gyldendals literary encyclopaedia in Danish Copenhagen Denmark Gyldendal ISBN 9788700366534 OCLC 2496580 Nunnally Hamilton Tiina 1979 Kvindelige danske forfattere 1820 1910 Danish women authors 1820 1910 in Danish Ballerup Bibliotekscentralen ISBN 87 552 0582 8 Brostrom Torben 1981 Danske digtere i det 20 arhundrede Danish poets of the 20th Century in Danish Copenhagen Denmark Gad ISBN 9788712174523 OCLC 58579575 Jorgensen Aage 1989 Dansk litteraturhistorisk bibliografi 1967 1986 Danish literary bibliography 1967 1986 in Danish Centre for Undervisning og Kulturformidling Copenhage Denmark Akademisk forlag Dansklaererforeningen Larsen Jytte ed 2000 Dansk kvindebiografisk leksikon Danish Women s Biographical Encyclopedia in Danish Copenhagen Denmark Rosinante ISBN 9788773579763 OCLC 48031935 Ellehauge Martin 1933 Det danske skuespil efter verdenskrigen Danish drama after the war in Danish Copenhagen Denmark Levin amp Munksgaard pp 21 23 ASIN B000X7QK40 OCLC 463332205 Reumert Poul Hagen 1940 Masker og mennesker Masks and humans in Danish Copenhagen Denmark Gyldendalske boghandel nordisk forlag pp 134 142 OCLC 7186690 Wearing J P 2014 The London Stage 1920 1929 A Calendar of Productions Performers and Personnel Plymouth UK Rowman amp Littlefield p 308 ISBN 978 0 8108 9301 6 Bramson Karen The Encyclopedia of Science Fiction 25 October 2014 Retrieved 3 June 2015 News and Views of Interest to Women in Professional and Domestic Fields In Nordic Literature PDF The New York Sun 11 February 1932 Retrieved 6 June 2015 Bramson Karen 1900 Den unge Frue Mands Vilje The Young Lady Man s Will two plays in Danish Copenhagen Denmark To skuespil Gyldendalske boghandels forlag F Hegel amp son ASIN B000WHFDTE OCLC 493768937 Bramson Karen 1901 Modre skuespil i tre akter Mothers Play in three acts in Danish Copenhagen Denmark Gyldendal ASIN B000WHGO4M OCLC 248764352 Bramson Karen c 1901 Mutter Schauspiel Mother Play in German Translated by Otto Hamburger Nurnberg Frankfurter OCLC 248764352 The Strong Internet Broadway Database 2015 Retrieved 13 May 2015 Lavauzelle Jacky 17 February 2015 Karen Bramson Le Professeur Klenow La laideur de l amour Karen Bramson Professor Klenow the ugliness of love in French Artgitato Retrieved 26 May 2015 Bramson Karen al Ustadh Klinuv Professor Klenov in Arabic Translated by Ṣalaḥ al Din Kamil OCLC 30987207 Bramson Karen 1904 Det lyriska versdramat Berengaria Dronning af Danmark Berengaria Queen of Denmark drama in lyrical verse in Danish Copenhagen Denmark ASIN B000WHK6MS OCLC 465527302 Bramson Karen 1905 Livets Glaede Life s Joy in Danish Copenhagen Denmark Det Schulbotheske forlag ASIN B000WHDE7M OCLC 557484997 Bramson Karen 1908 Elaman iloa Life s Joy in Finnish Helsinki Finland OCLC 467958855 Jensen Niels 30 April 2005 bog guide Danske litteraturepriser Book guide Danish literary prizes in Danish Retrieved 19 June 2015 Books received Truth 1927 04 07 p 678 Bramson Karen 1926 The Case of Dr Morel Translated from Danish into English by the author s brother David Stanley Alder London UK A M Philpot ASIN B000WHK6NM OCLC 557484978 Also published in 1950 in English as the Sins of a Paris Doctor Breamson Karen 1909 Dѣlo Doktora Morelya in Russian Anna Vasil evna Ganzen Petr Gotfridovic Ganzen St Petersburg Russia A F Marks OCLC 24019022 Bramson Karen 1921 Dĕloto Doktor Morel in Bulgarian Biblioteka Otbrani romani Sofia Bulgaria OCLC 873847760 Bramson Karen 1919 Un revolte A revolutionary in French Translated from Danish into French by the author Paris France E Fasquelle ASIN B0018HCNFY OCLC 491617501 Bramson Karen 1908 Pengene Fortaelling The Money a novel in Danish Copenhagen Denmark Schubothe Bramson Karen Wied Gustav 1909 AErtehalm Peas in a Pod in Danish Copenhagen Denmark Nabu Press ISBN 9781246478600 Bramson Karen 1910 Lykke Skuespil i tre Akter Happiness play in 3 acts in Danish ASIN B000WHK6TQ Bramson Karen 1911 Kongemagt Skuespil i fire Akter The King drama in four acts in Danish Copenhagen Denmark Gyldendal ASIN B000WHK6RI Bramson Karen 1912 U morja The King in Russian Anna Vasil evna Ganzen Petr Gotfridovic Ganzen Alvilde Prydz St Petersburg Russia A F Marks OCLC 71459709 Bramson Karen 1916 Mennesker af vor Tid People of our Time in Danish Copenhagen Denmark Hasselbalch OCLC 464870271 Une femme libre A free woman Le Temps in French 31 August 1917 Retrieved 12 May 2015 Bramson Karen 1922 Det store Drama The Great Drama in Danish Copenhagen Denmark Steen Hasselbachs Forlag ASIN B00CMG7VSE Bramson Karen 1925 Le Dictateur The Dictator in French Paris France Les Oeuvres libres ASIN B000WQOL1G OCLC 28863461 Theatre collections record view Medusa La Femme Fatale University of Kent Information Services Special Collections Retrieved 26 May 2015 Bramson Karen 1929 Nous les Barbares We the Barbarians in French Paris France Ernst Flammarion ASIN B0018HCNEK Bramson Karen 1931 Nosotros los barbaros We the barbarians in Spanish Madrid Spain Zeus OCLC 807481540 Bramson Karen 1929 Theatre Theatre in French Compendium of 12 of Karen Bramsons plays in French in four volumes Paris France Ernst Flammarion ISBN 9781278510798 Bramson Karen 1930 Men London UK Chapman amp Hall Bramson Karen 1930 Une amoureuse A Lover in French Paris France Ernst Flammarion OCLC 431804761 Bramson Karen 1932 Una enamorada A lover in Spanish Translated into Spanish by Francisco Pina Madrid Spain OCLC 431804761 Bramson Karen 1931 Une nuit d amour A night of Love in French Paris France Ernest Flammarion ASIN B0018HHQ8S Bramson Karen 1952 En kjaerlighetsnatt A night of Love in Norwegian translated into Norwegian by Trygve Width Series Alle tiders forfattere OCLC 467958823 Bramson Karen 1932 Un seul homme One man in French Paris France Ernest Flammarion ASIN B0018HJQ8Q Bramson Karen 1932 En Nat Roman One night A novel in Danish Copenhage Denmark Koppel ASIN B000WHDEBI Bramson Karen 1933 Star in French Paris France Ernst Flammarion ASIN B0018HEQXG Bramson Karen 1935 Lueur dans nos tenebres Light Among our Shadows in French Paris France Ernst Flammarion ASIN B0018HGLMU Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Karen Bramson amp oldid 1139521025, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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