
Camilla Collett
'Jacobine Camilla Collett', ''née'' Wergeland (
January 23,
1813 -
March 6,
1895) was a
Norwegian writer, often referred to as the first Norwegian
feminist. She was also the younger sister of Norwegian poet
Henrik Wergeland, and is recognized as being one of the first contributors to
realism in
Norwegian literature.
Life
Camilla was born in
Kristiansand, the daughter of
Nicolai Wergeland, a noted
theologian,
politician, and
composer in his time, and Alette nee Thaulow. When Camilla was four, her family moved to
Eidsvoll, where her father was made parish priest. Camilla grew up in a literary family, and she became a young diarist, in part because she found life in Eidsvoll dull. She spent most of her teens at a finishing school in
Christiansfeld in
Denmark.
During a visit to
Kristiania she met and fell in love with the poet
Johan Sebastian Welhaven, who was also her brother Henrik's literary nemesis. Relation between the three was complicated and in time became legendary in Norwegian
Romanticism. Collett was philosophically aligned with the Welhaven side of the debate, and her relationship with her brother may have been uneasy for some time. But there are indications that Camilla carried some resentment toward her father and brother over their opposition to her relationship with Welhaven.
In any event, her relationship with Welhaven eventually ended, and in 1841 she married
Peter Jonas Collett, a prominent politician, literary critic, and member of
Intelligenspartiet (the Intelligence party). It was by all accounts a marriage born out of love. As it turned out, he was a supportive and understanding husband with whom Camilla could discuss any topic. She started writing for publication after she married Collett.
Her most famous work is her only novel, ''Amtmandens Døttre (
The District Governor's Daughters)'' which was published anonymously in two separate parts in
1854 and
1855. The book is considered one of the first political novels in Norway and deals with the difficulties of being a woman in a patriarchical society in general and
forced marriages specifically. She also wrote a number of essays and polemics, as well as her memoirs.
Her literary models included female writers such as
Rahel Varnhagen and
George Sand, as well as
Edward Bulwer Lytton and
Theodor Mundt. Her style represented a departure from her contemporaries, in that she preferred a more casual, natural tone.
After ten years of marriage, Collett suddenly died. This left Camilla in a delicate situation with her four young sons. She was forced to sell her house and never managed to buy a new one again. Her three eldest sons were sent to be raised by relatives. She struggled with personal financial problems for the rest of her life.
She died in Kristiania in 1895.
Bibliography
★ ''
Amtmandens Døttre'' (novel) 1854–55 (reviewed editions: 1860, 1879)
★ ''Fortællinger'' (short prose) 1861
★ ''I de lange Nætter'' (diary) 1863
★ ''Sidste Blade I–III'' (articles) 1868–73
★ ''Fra de Stummes Leir'' (articles) 1877
★ ''Mod Strømmen I–II'' (articles) 1879–85
★ ''Skrifter I–X'' (collection of works) 1892–93
★ ''Dagbøker og breve'' (with Peter Jonas Collett) 1926–34 .
External links
★
Short biography on hivolda.no
★
link to all her works, at UiO.no