[Oe List ...] How Writing of Kierkegaard was Translated into English

Patricia Tuecke ptuecke at gmail.com
Wed Sep 4 22:35:46 PDT 2019


John Epps used SK's l, Existential Situation, etc. as the structure  of his
message, "The Spirit of the 20's". Aug 28, via OE Community Dialogue.,
describing the current situation the world is experiencing now. Perhaps he
knows where the quote is found.

On Fri, Aug 30, 2019 at 1:41 PM James Wiegel via OE <oe at lists.wedgeblade.net>
wrote:

> I notice in the RS-1 manual, at least at one place, the first lecture is
> called “The Question of God” lecture — of course followed by the Bultmann
> seminar and preceded by a meal conversation which I do not now recall
>
> Anyway, I somehow recall the sentence below as the opening of that
> lecture, accompanied by writing in the center of the black board “External
> Situation”, “Internal Crisis”, “Existential Question” and “Escape”
>
> With Respect,
> Jim Wiegel
>
> On Aug 30, 2019, at 10:43 AM, W. J. via OE <oe at lists.wedgeblade.net>
> wrote:
>
> My instant response (without thinking about it) is that this the voice of
> Joe Pierce on a Friday night. Take that for what it's worth. I'm not at all
> sure that it reflects SK's exact words, but I'd love to get the SK quote.
> Marshall
>
> On Friday, August 30, 2019, 9:47:57 AM EDT, James Wiegel via OE <
> oe at lists.wedgeblade.net> wrote:
>
>
> Thanks for this.  Can anyone point me to the Kierkegaard reference for the
> statement
> “When the external situation produces an internal crisis that raises a
> life question from which we try to escape, it is at that point that the
> question of god is raised”. It would be instructive to access the original
> quote.
>
> With Respect,
> Jim Wiegel
>
> On Aug 30, 2019, at 6:38 AM, Mary Kurian D'Souza via OE <
> oe at lists.wedgeblade.net> wrote:
>
> Thank you dear Beret for this vignette.
> Mary
>
> On Fri, Aug 30, 2019 at 1:06 PM Beret Griffith via OE <
> oe at lists.wedgeblade.net> wrote:
>
>
>    - [image: Howard Vincent Hong]
>
> Howard Hong and his wife Edna spent much of their lives translating the
> writings of Kierkegaard into English. He taught at St. Olaf College, my
> alma mater. I met Howard only a couple of times. His son Erik and his wife
> Carol are friends of Paul and myself.
>
> I'm sending along a part of the story of Howard and Edna because we owe
> our opportunity to read and reflect on Kierkegaard as a result of their
> translation work  which set the context for  the way they walked their talk
> in the world. I took these bits and pieces from his obituary.
>
> Howard entered St. Olaf College in 1930 and graduated in 1934. He studied
> English  and.... found himself reading Ibsen, whose volumes he had seen in
> his father's library. He learned from a biography that Ibsen had been
> influenced by Kierkegaard. *The name registered because his father had
> spoken of a farmer he knew who owned books by Kierkegaard. He then began to
> read Kierkegaard, what little there was of his work in English at the time.* Howard
> was a graduate student in English at the University of Minnesota from 1934
> to 1938, when the university awarded him the doctorate. While at Minnesota,
> he took a course with the Kierkegaard scholar David F. Swenson. After
> graduating, he and his new bride Edna Hatlestad went to Copenhagen, learned
> Danish, and translated Kierkegaard's *For Self- Examination* into
> English.
>
> Their life- work as Kierkegaard translators had begun. It was to include a
> six-volume edition of Kierkegaard's Journals and Papers (Indiana University
> Press) and the twenty-five volumes of Kierkegaard's Writings (Princeton
> University Press). Howard and Edna Hongs were celebrated and honored for
> their work as translators. In 1968, they won a National Book Award for
> their translation of the first volume of the Journals and Papers; in 1998,
> when the Princeton edition reached its conclusion, the Times Literary
> Supplement (London) said of it:
>
> * "All honour to the Hongs: Kierkegaard's Writings is one of the
> outstanding achievements in the history of philosophical translation." *
>
> Howard Hong taught philosophy at St. Olaf until he retired in 1978.
>
> Howard was appointed to the faculty in 1938, but Howard  won a scholarship
> and the Hongs spent that school year in Copenhagen. He taught at St. Olaf
> from 1939 to 1941  then left college to work with prisoners of war in this
> country during World War II. Then he and Edna worked with refugees in
> Germany from 1946 to 1948.
>
> In Germany, with his young family, he was both the director of the
> Lutheran World Federation Service to Refugees and the senior field officer
> of the Refugee Division of the World Council of Churches. Back in
> Northfield, he helped resettle over 250 refugees, chiefly from Latvia. In
> the refugee camps, the Hongs saw squalor and lives torn apart by war,  yet
> they believed with Kierkegaard's *Works of Love* that "love builds up by
> presupposing that love is present in the ground" or basis of human lives,
> even under the most desperate circumstances. This book inspired the Hongs
> in their work with refugees, and it became their first post-war translation
> project.
>
> Howard and Edna also established the Kierkegaard Library, which is housed
> at the college and bears their name. This library was originally their
> private collection. The core of the Kierkegaard Library is a substantial
> reconstruction of Kierkegaard's own library, in the same editions he owned.
> The Hongs gave their library to St. Olaf in 1976 and it has become an
> internationally renowned center of Kierkegaard research.
>
>  During summer Howard and his family lived at Hovland, next to Lake
> Superior, near the Canadian border. He bought many tracts of land around
> Hovland, logged over by timber companies and sold for taxes, which he
> restored largely at his own expense and according to a plan devised by him
> and an experienced forester. The restoration work was officially recognized
> and in 2001, he and Edna were given the Minnesota Outstanding
> Conservationist Award by the Minnesota Association of Soil and Water
> Conservation Districts. The eminent Kierkegaard scholar, Howard  came to
> enjoy introducing himself as a "forester".
>
> *Excerpted from Howard Hong's obituary published in the Northfield News on
> March 18, 2010*
>
>
> *NOTE:  When John and Lynda Cock came to Northfield to teach The Faith
> Journey Retreat (RS-1 where 30+ people attended) they visited the
> Kierkegaard Library and discovered a coincidence....they have to tell that
> story.  *
>
> *Beret*
>
>
>
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