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  1. The couple had three children; Karin was the youngest. They moved to Lund in 1939, and then to Gothenburg when Tore Johannisson was appointed Professor of Scandinavian languages at the University of Gothenburg. [2] Career. Johannisson's research focused on the history of medicine from a societal perspective.

  2. Dating & Relationship status. She is currently single. She is not dating anyone. We don't have much information about She's past relationship and any previous engaged. According to our Database, She has no children.

    • 72 years old
    • Professor, Idea historian, Author
    • 11 October, 1944
    • Libra
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  4. Karin Johannisson was a Swedish idea historian who was Professor of the History of Science and Ideas at Uppsala University. She was a member of the Royal Swedish Academy of Sciences.

  5. Apr 14, 2009 · Karin Johannisson penetrates more deeply into precisely this aspect – melancholy as an emotional state. Not the theories or the myths, but the real experience. Franz Kafka, Wittgenstein, Rilke and Virginia Woolf all suffered from melancholy, and all of them had a strictly disciplined relationship with food.

  6. Nov 23, 2016 · Professor Emerita Karin Johannisson has died. 2016-11-23. Professor Emerita Karin Johannisson has left us after a period of illness at the. age of 72. (Image removed) Karin was one of the most renowned scholars in the humanities in Sweden and made modern history of medicine a successful research area in Swedish academy and in public consciousness.

  7. Nov 23, 2016 · January 01, 1944. Died. November 23, 2016. Genre. Health, Mind & Body, Philosophy, History Of Ideas. edit data. Karin Johannisson was a Swedish professor of Science and Ideas History at Uppsala University since 1996. Johannisson was a member of the Gastronomic Academy since 2003, and the Royal Academy of Sciences and the Royal Science Society ...

  8. The couple had three children; Karin was the youngest. They moved to Lund in 1939, and then to Gothenburg when Tore Johannisson was appointed Professor of Scandinavian languages at the University of Gothenburg.