The Bridge Contributors

The Bridge Contributors

The Bridge Volume 29 Number 2 Article 4 2006 Contributors Follow this and additional works at: https://scholarsarchive.byu.edu/thebridge Part of the European History Commons, European Languages and Societies Commons, and the Regional Sociology Commons Recommended Citation (2006) "Contributors," The Bridge: Vol. 29 : No. 2 , Article 4. Available at: https://scholarsarchive.byu.edu/thebridge/vol29/iss2/4 This Front Matter is brought to you for free and open access by BYU ScholarsArchive. It has been accepted for inclusion in The Bridge by an authorized editor of BYU ScholarsArchive. For more information, please contact [email protected], [email protected]. Contributors to This Issue Kristine J. Anderson is a librarian at Purdue University and holds a Ph.D. in comparative literature from SUNY-Bingharnton. She has authored the entries on "Danish" and "Norwegian" in the Encyclopedia of Literary Translation into English as well as articles and conference presentations on Danish writers such as Isak Dinesen and Dorrit Willumsen. George Bailey is a graduate student in Teaching English to Speakers of Other Languages at Brigham Young University. He is currently studying issues related to immigration and family literacy. He taught first-year Danish at BYU and received his BA in Chinese Aase Bak holds a "magisterkonferens" in art history from Aarhus Universitet, 1979. She worked as archival assistant at The Danish Emigration Archives in Aalborg, Denmark, from 1978-83 and did graduate studies in art history at the University of Minnesota, Minneapolis, 1985-87, earning a Ph.D. in 1994, with a dissertation titled Images and Ethnicity: Visual Arts Among Danish-Americans 1868- 1934. She has worked as a curator of modem art at Nordjyllands Kunstrnuseum in Aalborg, Denmark, since 1988. Erik M. Christensen holds a mag.art. and Ph.D. in comparative literary history and a gold medal from Aarhus University, Denmark. From 1973 he was professor at the Freie Universitat Berlin and Humboldt-Universitat zu Berlin. He has authored numerous books and articles on Danish writers, for example, Johannes Ewald, Martin A. Hansen, Sten Stensen Blicher, Georg Brandes, and Johannes V. Jensen. Along with four colleagues from Aarhus University, he is preparing a critical edition of the collected poems of the Danish Nobel Prize winner Johannes V. Jensen. Jean Christensen received her Ph.D. from UCLA in 1979 and is currently Head of the Division of Music History and Director of Graduate Studies, School of Music, at the University of Louisville, specializing in music composed since 1900. Her publications treat 5 topics in Danish music, Schoenberg studies, jazz, and, more recently, music by Bulgarian composers. Christensen was a Fulbright scholar in Denmark and Sweden (1988) and in Bulgaria (2002, 2003). Peter G. Christensen received a Ph.D. in comparative literature from the State University of New York at Binghamton. At Cardinal Stritch University he currently teaches English literature to 1800, Shakespeare, non-Western literature, literary theory, and science fiction/fantasy. He has also been investigating films and novels about the life of Jesus. John R. Christianson joined the faculty of Luther College in 1967. He has written, edited, or translated twelve books and more than 100 articles on various aspects of Scandinavian and Scandinavian­ American history. From 1999-2002, he was editor of The Bridge: Journal of the Danish American Heritage Society. Lea Rosson Delong is an independent curator and art historian focusing on American art of the Depression era and contemporary art. She is the author of Grant Wood's Main Street, Christian Petersen: Sculptor, Shifting Visions: 0 'Keeffe, Gus ton, Richter, and numerous other exhibition catalogues and publications. She is currently guest curator for the Brunnier Art Museum, organizing an exhibition and publication on Grant Wood's murals for the library at Iowa State University. Linda Donelson is the author of the bestselling biography Out of Isak Dinesen in Africa and is creator of the Karen Blixen - Isak Dinesen Information Site, karenblixen.com. Together with Marianne Stecher­ Hansen, she authored the article Karen Blixen for the Dictionary of Literary Biography: Twentieth-Century Danish Writers . Joakim Garff received a cand.theol. degree (1986) and a lic.theol. degree (1991) from the University of Copenhagen. He has been a board member of the Kierkegaard Society, co-editor and co­ publisher of Kierkegaardiana, and of Kredsen and fonix. He has been Research Professor at the S0ren Kierkegaard Forskningscenter (SK 6 Research Center) and co-editor of SRJren Kierkegaard's Skrifter (SK's Writings) since 1994. His books include: Den SRJvnlRJse [The Insomniac]; Kierkegaard lcest cestetisklbiografisk (1995), [Kierkegaard from an Aesthetic/Biographical Perspective]; Kierkegaards cestetik [Kierkegaard's Aesthetics] (with Poul Erik T0jner and J0rgen Dehs, 1996); Skriftbilleder; SRJren Kiekerkegaards journaler, notesbRJger, hcefter, ark, Zapper og strimler [Written Images: SRJren Kierkegaard's Journals, Notebooks, Booklets, Sheets, Scraps, and Slips of Paper] (with Niels J0rgen Cappel0m and Johnny Kondrup, 1996; trans. Bruce Kirmmse, Princeton and Oxford, 2002) and, most recently, SAK. SRJren Aabye Kierkegaard. En biografi (2000; English translation by Bruce Kirmmse: SRJren Kierkegaard: A Biography [Princeton, 2004]). His work in progress is a monograph about the concept of education in Kierkegaard's thought. Barbara George gained an appreciation for the qualitative aspects of history and social systems, including their interactions in achieving outcomes, while completing graduate studies in liberal arts and clinical social work. Further studies of the work of Carl Jung, system theories, and pattern recognition, along with Assisi Seminars, added these concepts to the tapestry of her understanding of communities and human interactions. Four years ago, while conducting genealogy and family history research in Indianapolis, Barbara uncovered the faded and untold story of First Trinity Danish Church. In her presentation she honors the legacy of this small group of Danish Immigrants and pioneers in the Danish Church movement in the United States. Mikael Engelstoft Hansen is a computer programmer at the University of California at Berkeley. He describes himself as a "modem day Danish immigrant and casual writer." Thorvald Hansen was born in Troy, New York, and educated in the public schools of that city. He came to Des Moines in 1941 and graduated from Grand View College and Seminary in 1946. He earned a B.A. from Drake University in 1951 and an M.A. from the University of South Dakota in 1965. He has served Danish 7 communities and Grand View College in various capacities. He has written five books on immigrant subjects and translated two. He is now retired and lives in Des Moines, where he continues to edit Church and Life. Lynn Henrichsen, a descendant of Danish immigrants to Utah, is chair of Brigham Young University's Linguistics and English Language Department and a professor of Teaching English to Speakers of Other Languages (TESOL). He received his Ed.D. from the University of Hawaii. Poul Houe was born in Denmark and educated at Arhus University. He taught at Uppsala University from 1973-79 and since 1979 has taught at the University of Minnesota, where he is professor of Scandinavian languages and literature. Among his many publications on nineteenth and twentieth century Scandinavian literature and culture are several on Andersen, Kierkegaard, and Brandes. Jake Huckaby is an undergraduate student in electrical engineering at Brigham Young University, where he taught first-year Danish and is currently involved in several research projects. Joy Ibsen is a Danish-American writer, composer, piano teacher, and lay minister. She recently compiled and published Songs of Denmark: Sange for Danskere. A graduate of Grand View College and Shimer College, Joy studied religion and literature at the University of Chicago and has served as president of the Danish Immigrant Museum. Anne Ipsen is a Danish-American writer and a member of the DAHS Board of Trustees. Her research on Fan0 for the just­ published historical novel, Karen from the Mill, inspired her conference talk. lpsen's other books include two memoirs: A Child's Tapestry of War and Teenage Immigrant, first published in The Bridge. 8 David Iversen is the Cataloging Librarian at Gordon B. Olson Library at Minot State University in Minot, North Dakota, home of the Norsk Hostfest, which takes place the second week in October. He first translated_ short stories by Carl Hansen when he was a senior at Dana College in Blair, Nebraska, and has dabbled in reading and translating his tales ever since. James Iversen is Professor Emeritus of Aerospace Engineering, Iowa State University. He attended Dana College, Blair, Nebraska, and received a PhD at Iowa State University. He has served as Visiting Scientist at the Marine Research Laboratory in Lyngby, Denmark and as Guest Professor at the University of Aarhus. He is President of the Danish American Heritage Society. Rudolf Jensen received a B.A. from Carleton College, an M.A. from the University of Minnesota, and a Ph.D. from the University of Wisconsin, Madison; both graduate degrees were in Scandinavian studies. He has taught at Grand View College for twenty years. Kristi Planck Johnson, a graduate of Dana College, has an M.A. from the University of Minnesota in Scandinavian literature and language and a Ph.D. in international education from the University of Maryland. She is currently Associate Professor of Education at Marymount University in Arlington, Virginia. Avis E. Jorgenson, who holds an Ed.D., retired from university teaching and now lives in Tucson, AZ. She spends her time writing Vol. V of the family history, exercising at the pool, cooking, entertaining, reading, and attending theater or Arizona Historical Society programs. Her interest in Danish history and culture never wanes. Lisa Kramme was born and raised in Cordova, Nebraska, home to Danish immigrants and their descendants. She heard the stories of Hans Christian Andersen as they were told to her by her father and storyteller, Darrol Larsen.

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