Magnus Magnusson: Difference between revisions
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{{Creator | {{Creator | ||
|name= Magnus Magnusson | |name= Magnus Magnusson | ||
|image=[[Image:Magnus-Magnusson-01.jpg|200px]] | |image=[[Image:Magnus-Magnusson-01.jpg|200px]]<br>Per Magnus Paul Magnusson | ||
|Born= August 21, 1948 | |Born= August 21, 1948 | ||
|Died= | |Died= | ||
Line 15: | Line 15: | ||
He worked as a lecturer at Stockholm University, where he mainly taught the subject Special Education. | He worked as a lecturer at Stockholm University, where he mainly taught the subject Special Education. | ||
By 2010 he had met | By 2010 he had met Liya Kalinnikova and a bit later he start working as guest professor for NARFU ''(Northern Arctic Federal University, Department of linguistics and international communication (Arkhangelsk, Russia))''. In 2017 ha became guest lecturer in Swedish at the Moscow State University until he retired in the summer of 2020. | ||
===Interest in comics=== | ===Interest in comics=== | ||
Magnus Magnusson wrote a Phantom story in 1972: "The Thousand Tigers" ''(Swedish: "De tusen tigrarna")''. It was based on a synopsis by Lennart Hartler and deals with why there are tigers in Bangalla, home country of the Phantom. | Magnus Magnusson wrote a Phantom story in 1972: "[[Fantomen 4/1993|The Thousand Tigers]]" ''(Swedish: "De tusen tigrarna")''. It was based on a synopsis by Lennart Hartler and deals with why there are tigers in Bangalla, home country of the Phantom. | ||
He began collecting notes and comic clips from Swedish newspapers and weekly magazines, in addition to various comic books. He used his knowledge of Mandrake to write "[[Mandrake - Magikern]]" in 2003, but no Swedish publishing house was willing to publish it. | |||
In 2011 he contributed an article to the book "[[Lee Falk – Storyteller]]" and in 2016 he wrote "Mandrake the Magician: The magical wonder of a generation" for "[[Mandrake the Magician - The Hidden Kingdom of Murderers: Sundays 1935–1937|The Hidden Kingdom of Murderers: Sundays 1935–1937]]" by Titan Comics. | |||
==External links== | ==External links== | ||
[https://www.researchgate.net/profile/Magnus-Magnusson-8 researchgate.net: Magnus Magnusson] | *[https://www.researchgate.net/profile/Magnus-Magnusson-8 researchgate.net: Magnus Magnusson] | ||
*[https://www.phantomwiki.org/index.php/The_Thousand_Tigers PhantomWiki: The Thousand Tigers] | |||
*[https://rogersmagasin.com/tag/magnus-magnusson/ RogersMagasin: Magnus Magnusson] | |||
[[Category:phans|Magnusson, Magnus]] | [[Category:phans|Magnusson, Magnus]] |
Latest revision as of 15:04, 26 August 2024
Magnus Magnusson | |
Per Magnus Paul Magnusson | |
Biographical information | |
Born: | August 21, 1948 |
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Died: | |
Nationality: | Swedish |
Occupation: | |
Website: | |
Biography
Life and career
After he graduated from Wargentinsskolan (1967 cohort) in Ôstersund he studied at Uppsala University. He later studied pedagogy at Karlstads universitet (2001 cohort).
He worked as a lecturer at Stockholm University, where he mainly taught the subject Special Education.
By 2010 he had met Liya Kalinnikova and a bit later he start working as guest professor for NARFU (Northern Arctic Federal University, Department of linguistics and international communication (Arkhangelsk, Russia)). In 2017 ha became guest lecturer in Swedish at the Moscow State University until he retired in the summer of 2020.
Interest in comics
Magnus Magnusson wrote a Phantom story in 1972: "The Thousand Tigers" (Swedish: "De tusen tigrarna"). It was based on a synopsis by Lennart Hartler and deals with why there are tigers in Bangalla, home country of the Phantom.
He began collecting notes and comic clips from Swedish newspapers and weekly magazines, in addition to various comic books. He used his knowledge of Mandrake to write "Mandrake - Magikern" in 2003, but no Swedish publishing house was willing to publish it.
In 2011 he contributed an article to the book "Lee Falk – Storyteller" and in 2016 he wrote "Mandrake the Magician: The magical wonder of a generation" for "The Hidden Kingdom of Murderers: Sundays 1935–1937" by Titan Comics.