![]() "Hunger" is largely an autobiographical work, and slightly raises the curtain on those terrible and bitter times that Hamsun experienced himself in Christiania during his hungry youth. Chronic hunger and a provoked consequent overstimulation allows the narrator of the novel to look at the world differently. The reason is a state of a long effect caused by hunger. Hunger has exacerbated internal vision of the narrator, and he notices the smallest external facts of life, inadvertently shifting and increasing their scale. ![]() ![]() We are thankful for their contributions and encourage you to make your own.Įvents included in the novel, are important of the understanding of a psychological state of the narrator. These notes were contributed by members of the GradeSaver community. ![]()
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