Ingeborg Refling Hagen was in many ways a self-taught
philosopher. In her autobiographical works, her fictional "self" learns how to listen to her own "old one" and gaining
wisdom from it. In a wider sense, this way of thinking is connected to her respect for old oral traditions handed down. In many of her works, one finds an old
storyteller, giving advice, pointing out the way, or setting the plot. In her autobiographical works she also describes her visions in many places, often prompted by hard pondering on philosophical problems occurring in literature. She developed a clear
feminist statement based on an interpretation of the
Bible, especially
Mother Mary and
Eve, whom she often compared as female
archetypes. She was, however, known to think of males as weaker in many ways than her own gender, and discussed many times the relationship between man and woman, and the way they treated children. She would often criticize certain types of self-righteous women. Much of her thinking in this respect derived from the fact that she herself had experienced what a defenseless child could suffer under the hands of a farmer's wife. She believed that women often would discriminate pauper's children on behalf of those they themselves had given birth to. Ingeborg Refling Hagen's basic philosophy and thinking is a blend of
Christian ideas and
socialist thinking. The vision of collecting all myths and stories in one universal system of thoughts was in a way her lifelong project, as she put it: "making an archive for those that are to follow, so that they can work further". Hagen's philosophical outlook can most easily be spotted in her 1972 poem
Guds Tuntre (
The Courtyard Tree of God). Here, she describes the
Norse World Tree Yggdrasil as planted by
God, and takes comfort in the mythic explanation when she gets "dizzy from hurrying thoughts". She finds a quiet point, Tangen, and decides to work from there. Here, she finds friends and family, but acknowledges that "life comes from the same root". Yggdrasil is in fact the revolving earth, and all the world, all humanity, are inside its branches. Then, war comes, and the father in the poem enlists to defend the country. His farewell-song contains the statement that a conquering power never will win over a small country, mostly because the country always will live in the stories and the songs. The poem is patriotic, and universal at the same time. The father advises his children to: :"...learn all the stories, all the songs, all the inherited wisdom from the generations before. Own the language, and you will prevail. Through the stories, you will find your way to the roots of the old tree, which is rooted in the old days, and spreads its branches all over the world. The people with a memory will live." == Personal life ==