Ove Jørgensen
Danish classical scholar (1877–1950) / From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Ove Jørgensen (5 September 1877 – 31 October 1950) was a Danish scholar of classics, literature and ballet. He is known for formulating Jørgensen's law, which describes the narrative conventions used in Homeric poetry when relating the actions of the gods.
Ove Jørgensen | |
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Born | (1877-09-05)5 September 1877 Copenhagen, Denmark |
Died | 31 October 1950(1950-10-31) (aged 73) |
Burial place | Holmen Cemetery, Copenhagen |
Known for | Jørgensen's law |
Parent |
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Academic background | |
Education | Metropolitanskolen, Copenhagen |
Alma mater | University of Copenhagen |
Academic work | |
Discipline | Classical scholarship |
Sub-discipline | Homeric poetry |
Notable works | "The Appearances of the Gods in Books 9–12 of the Odyssey" (1904)[lower-alpha 1] |
The son of Sophus Mads Jørgensen, a professor of chemistry, Jørgensen was born and lived for most of his life in Copenhagen. He was educated at the prestigious Metropolitanskolen and at the University of Copenhagen, where he began his study of the Homeric poems. In 1904, following academic travels to Berlin, Athens and Constantinople, he published "The Appearances of the Gods in Books 9–12 of the Odyssey", an article in which he outlined the distinctions between how the gods are referred to by mortal characters and by the narrator and gods in the Odyssey. The observation of these distinctions became known as "Jørgensen's law".
Jørgensen gave up classical scholarship in 1905, following a dispute with other academics after he was passed over for an invitation to a newly formed learned society. He had intended to publish a monograph based on his 1904 article, but it never materialised. Instead, he devoted himself to teaching, both at schools and at the University of Copenhagen: among his students were the future poet Johannes Weltzer and Poul Hartling, later prime minister of Denmark. He maintained a lifelong friendship and correspondence with the composer Carl Nielsen and his wife, the sculptor Anne Marie Carl-Nielsen.
Jørgensen published on the works of Charles Dickens and was a recognised authority on ballet. His views on the latter were conservative and nationalistic, promoting what he saw as authentic, masculine Danish aesthetics – represented by the ballet master August Bournonville – against modernist, liberalising innovations from Europe and the United States. He wrote critically of the American dancers Isadora Duncan and Loïe Fuller, but was later an advocate of the Russian choreographer Michel Fokine.