Stockholm university

Johan KlingborgResearch Officer

About me

PhD in Literary Studies. Research Officer at the Department of Culture and Aesthetics. Literary critic at Swedish daily Expressen.

Research

I conduct research at the intersection of literary history and media history. I am particularly interested in the conditions for reading and writing in relation to the media ecology of the 20th century.

My first book, Verkar film: 1930-talslitteraturen i det svenska filmnätverket ("Seemingly Film: 1930s Literature in the Swedish Film Network", 2024), examines how Swedish literature was reshaped when moving images—following technological, discursive, institutional, and architectonic developments—became a comprehensive aspect in people’s everyday lives. This film network brought about a biopolitics of the eye aimed at creating a homogenized observer within the population, who could serve both the emerging Swedish welfare state and an accelerating capitalist consumer culture. Through close-readings of works by Karin Boye, Artur Lundkvist, Eyvind Johnson, Josef Kjellgren, and Erik Asklund, the book argues that the literature of the 1930s came to engage critically and productively with the network, while simultaneously incorporating—thematically as well as formally—its regulatory mechanisms.

Publications

A selection from Stockholm University publication database

  • Lockande ljus. Biografarkitektur och elektrisk belysning i Karin Boyes Astarte

    2021. Johan Klingborg. Edda. Nordisk tidsskrift for litteraturforskning 108 (3), 176-189

    Article

    Få romaner i svensk modernistisk litteratur skildrar den urbana moderniteten med sådan medvetenhet om samtida idéströmningar som Karin Boyes Astarte (1931). Men om Boyes roman handlar om moderniteten så är den också teknologiskt villkorliggjord av densamma. Artikelns syfte är att blottlägga dessa mediehistoriska villkor genom en undersökning av romanen utifrån den ljus- och uppmärksamhetsregim – en syntes av begrepp av Jonathan Crary och Gilles Deleuze – som framträdde omkring 1930 till följd av det elektriska ljusets genombrott i urbaniteten och en arkitektonisk strukturomvandling av biografen. Skyltfönsterbelysning, ljusreklamer, neonskyltar och de nya biografpalatsens avancerade ljusspel bidrog vid den här tiden till en ökad styrning av människors perception och rörelsemönster, och artikeln visar hur denna regim strukturerar den kritik av konsumtionssamhället och masskulturen som gestaltas i romanen.

    Read more about Lockande ljus. Biografarkitektur och elektrisk belysning i Karin Boyes Astarte
  • Verkar film: 1930-talslitteraturen i det svenska filmnätverket

    2024. Johan Klingborg.

    Thesis (Doc)

    The incessant distribution of moving images in the digital era not only draws attention to contemporary and future predicaments for reading and writing, but also makes it possible to recognize the ways in which literature historically has been contingent on optical media. This study examines how Swedish modernist literature in the 1930s responded to and was shaped by a situation in which moving images—following technological, discursive, institutional, and architectonic developments—had become a comprehensive aspect in people’s everyday lives. This film network brought about a biopolitics of the eye aimed at creating a homogenized observer within the population, who could serve both the emerging Swedish welfare state and an accelerating capitalist consumer culture. The study argues that the literature of the 1930s came to engage critically and productively with the network, while simultaneously incorporating—thematically as well as formally—its regulatory mechanisms.

    Methodologically, the study is grounded in media archaeology. Literary texts serve as accounts of the medial conditions that make this literature possible in the first place, functioning as “a discourse on discourse.” Hence, while the literature is analyzed from the perspective of the network, these analyses conversely also shed light on the network and its mechanisms for subjectivation. The study consists of four chapters with in-depth analyses of literary works in relation to particular dynamics of the network, while also considering the changes, openings, closures, and unforeseen effects that continually appeared within it.

    The first chapter shows how Karin Boye’s novel Astarte both reflects on and internalizes the changed conditions of perception that resulted from the breakthrough of electric light in the urban environment, with particular attention paid to its role in the movie palace. Conversely, the second chapter focuses on the part of the cinema building secluded from such perception control, namely the projection room, which serves as a precondition for the protagonist’s coming into being as a writer in Eyvind Johnson’s Künstlerroman Romanen om Olof. The third chapter connects Erik Asklund’s and Artur Lundkvist’s prose experiments in the early 1930s with the emergence of small-gauge film, which enabled a dispersed perception that was contrary to the strategy of the network. The fourth chapter, finally, shows how Boye’s novel Kallocain and Josef Kjellgren’s novel Människor kring en bro recapitulate the discourses and practices of educational film, which taught students, workers, and military personnel what was worth observing.

    Read more about Verkar film

Show all publications by Johan Klingborg at Stockholm University