Lise Bach Hansen
A major contributor to this article appears to have a close connection with its subject. (April 2014) |
(based in Copenhagen, Denmark) is a curator, producer, and head of the successful live literature program at The Royal Library, Denmark.She is known for organizing literary conversations for the library’s public program series: International Authors' Stage 'International Forfatterscene' which takes place in The Black Diamond, a modern waterfront extension to the Library's old building on Slotsholmen in central Copenhagen. Since 2008 she has turned The Royal Library into Copenhagen’s principal scene for live conversations between leading international writers, intellectuals, top politicians and artists.
Early life and education
Lise Bach Hansen was born in Jutland, Denmark. Her father, Søren Christian Hansen (1945–1993), was a playwright, novelist and documentarist. Her mother, Ester Bach (1947-), worked as a teacher in language and music and her brother Jens Ole Bach Hansen is currently a UN Diplomat. Lise Bach Hansen has received a master degree, a Mémoire de Diplome d’Etudes Aproffondie from the Ecole Doctorale at Université ParisX, Nanterre University and Université ParisIII, La Sorbonne. Her memoire compared and confronted French classic theatre of the 17th century with the works of the playwright and essayist Ludvig Holberg (1684–1754) considered the founder of Danish and Norwegian literature. She also obtained a master degree in Communication from Roskilde University in Denmark.
The Royal Library, Denmark
In 2008, Lise Bach Hansen founded International Forfatterscene, a conversation series with world known writers, intellectuals, artists and politicians. As head of both this specific scene and a program for students; 'Students Only!' Lise Bach Hansen has developed a concept of long lasting and in depth going conversations with international, public personalities such as: Kofi Annan, Dario Fo, Hillary Clinton, Salman Rushdie, Herta Müller, Siri Hustvedt, Bernard-Henri Lévy, Slavoj Žižek, Günter Grass, Ban Ki-moon etc etc. She has worked in partnership with fx. Paul Holdengräber from NYPL LIVE and such organizations as Siemens, PEN, Institut Français and The Goethe Institute.
Career
Before founding The International Authors Stage at The Royal Library in Copenhagen, she has been in charge of communication and PR within a wide range of professional fields such as film, art, theatre and politics in both Paris and Copenhagen and she has held positions at both The European Parliament in Bruxelles and the Danish art gallery, Kunstforeningen Gl. Strand in Copenhagen. She took the initiative to an ambitious translation project from Danish into contemporary French of six plays of Ludvig Holberg. This project was made in collaboration with La Maison Antoine Vitez in France and was published by Editions Théâtrales in Paris.
Publications
Her writing on contemporary cultural tendencies has been published several times in the European cultural magazine, Lettre International, Danish news papers such as Politiken, Berlingske Tidende, Information and French magazines such as Minotaure, Théâtre Public and P:U:C:K. She is currently the editor in chief of The Danish Cultural Magazine Diamanten.
References
- "Knowledge is pleasure", chronicle in Politiken
- "More than just a hotel", article in Information
- "Den politiske (film)scene", chronicle in Politiken
- "Ludvig Holberg, hier et aujourd’hui", article in Théâtre Public
- "Holberg på fransk", chronicle in Politiken
External links
This article has not been added to any content categories. Please help out by adding categories to it so that it can be listed with similar articles. (April 2014) |