Author | Bertil Almqvist |
---|---|
Country | Sweden |
Language | Swedish |
Genre | children |
Published | 1948- |
Barna Hedenhös (English: The Hedenhös Children) is the name of a series of Swedish children's books in the 1950s written by Bertil Almqvist. The story is set in the Stone Age and follows the Hedenhös family. Barna Hedenhös is mostly known as a book series, but Almqvist also made an animated television series about the Hedenhös family that was broadcast on SVT in 1972. Additionally, Almqvist made a comic version of the Hedenhös books for the comic book Tuff och Tuss during the 1950s; the comic version later was remade for the Pelle Svanslös children's comic book in the 1970s.
The books tell the story of the Swedish family Hedenhös, consisting of the father Ben, mother Knota, and their two children Sten and Flisa, and their dog Urax. The family also has a horse called Hårfagre and a cow called Mura. The books contain both actual events and fantasy episodes.
In all of the stories, the Hedenhös family invents or comes up with things that are known in the modern world today. As an example, the Hedenhös family moves to an island they call "Stockholmen" – the implication being that it was the Hedenhös family that established and was the first to live in present-day , Sweden. Another example is that the Hedenhös family launches "Urlympiska spelen" (Prehistoric Olympics) and takes part in it, thus being revealed to be a predecessor to the modern Olympic Games.
The original Barna Hödenhös books have been accused of being racist by present-day journalists. For example, dark-skinned people in the books are referred to as "negros", which is considered an offensive term nowadays. In 2013 Bonnier Carlsen temporarily halted its re-release of the books as Barna Hedenhös upptäcker Amerika (English: The Hedenhös Children Discover America) since the 1950 publications refer to Native Americans as "red skins". A new text was inserted in the section concerning the first interactions between the Hedenhös family and the Native American tribe, so it would not cause offence.