Aniara

Harry Martinson

Pages

150

Year

1956

Difficulty

Moderate

Themes

space, humanity, technology, environmental destruction

A doomed spaceship drifts off course and its passengers slowly forget they are heading nowhere, Aniara is a cycle of poems that reads like a novel and lingers like a nightmare.

Why Start Here

Aniara is Martinson’s most concentrated achievement and the easiest entry into his world. Written as a sequence of 103 cantos narrated by the ship’s “Mimarobe”, the keeper of a machine that projects images of the lost Earth, it tells the story of a displaced humanity slowly succumbing to despair, distraction, and invented religion. The form is unusual but never alienating; the emotion is direct and cumulative.

Written in 1956, it anticipates climate anxiety, techno-utopianism, and the spiritual emptiness of consumer culture with an accuracy that is almost uncanny. It is short enough to read in a weekend and dense enough to revisit for years.

What to Expect

A poem-novel hybrid in short, numbered cantos. The language moves between the mythological and the coldly technical. Grief builds slowly, almost imperceptibly, until it is everywhere. It is not comfortable reading, but it is essential.

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