Klaus Rifbjerg (born December 15, 1931, Copenhagen, Denmark—died April 4, 2015, Copenhagen) was a Danish poet, novelist, playwright, and editor.
Rifbjerg first attracted public notice with an ironic collection of autobiographical prose poems, Under vejr med mig selv (1956; “Findings About Myself”). Efterkrig (1957; “After the War”) contains much of his earliest poetry. His first novel, Den kroniske uskyld (1958; “The Chronic Innocence”), is a further examination of his past and describes his school years while considering the loss of innocence. His later novels included Anna (jeg) Anna (1969; Anna, I, Anna), Tak for turen (1975; “Thanks for the Trip”), and De hellige aber (1981; Witness to the Future).
Of great importance for Danish poetry of the 1960s were the poems in Konfrontation (1960), in which Rifbjerg attempted to create new forms of language. He used the same innovative technique in Camouflage (1961) and Portræt (1963). His Amagerdigte (1965; “Amager Poems”) was a collection of realistic poems about the island on which he was raised. Digte af Klaus Rifbjerg (“Poems of Klaus Rifbjerg”) appeared in 1986. Rifbjerg was editor-in-chief for the literary periodical Vindrosen (1959–63). He cowrote with Jasper Jensen a number of satirical revues for the Student Association in Copenhagen and also wrote for film, radio, and television.