In his newest book, published by University of Chicago Press in August, Professor Miller continues to throw open the world of Old Norse studies to interested readers, delving beneath the Vikings\u27 world of brutality and chaos to expose a deeper struggle for social equilibrium. His examination of ancient Iceland\u27s sagas and legal code sheds light on the society that produced them and reveals how the culture of the feud central to this stateless society, was driven by the related norms of honor, reciprocity and balance. The selections that follow are from the prologue and conclusion of Bloodtaking and Peacemaking
Combining an accessible approach with innovative scholarship, An Introduction to the Sagas of Icelan...
The corpus of sagas known under the genre fornaldarsögur has appeared sporadically within academia f...
Absract In the field of medieval Icelandic studies, "the oral tradition" refers to the accumulated a...
In his newest book, published by University of Chicago Press in August, Professor Miller continues ...
A Review of Bloodtaking and Peacemaking: Feud, Law, and Society in Saga Iceland by William Ian Mill...
involves kin groups and homicides. This distinction no longer seems tenable, given the recognition t...
abstract: Warriors, as all members of society in medieval Scandinavia, were bound by a course of rul...
For a long time now, Old Norse literature has often been colonized and misappropriated by modern rig...
Prior to the Norwegian annexation, Icelandic society lacked a government with an executive branch. A...
The transition from a semiotic system of textual comprehension to a system of internal structural bo...
Medieval Icelandic law has been appropriated for modern purposes as diverse as creating a history fo...
Njáls saga is the best known and most highly regarded of all medieval Icelandic sagas and it occupie...
Abstract The aim of this essay is to understand the view of man as a creature in the Norse culture b...
THESIS 11450The ?slendingaso?gur, or Icelandic family sagas, represent a deeply introspective cultur...
Heimskringla is the best known and most important book of Old Norse kings' sagas. A medieval masterp...
Combining an accessible approach with innovative scholarship, An Introduction to the Sagas of Icelan...
The corpus of sagas known under the genre fornaldarsögur has appeared sporadically within academia f...
Absract In the field of medieval Icelandic studies, "the oral tradition" refers to the accumulated a...
In his newest book, published by University of Chicago Press in August, Professor Miller continues ...
A Review of Bloodtaking and Peacemaking: Feud, Law, and Society in Saga Iceland by William Ian Mill...
involves kin groups and homicides. This distinction no longer seems tenable, given the recognition t...
abstract: Warriors, as all members of society in medieval Scandinavia, were bound by a course of rul...
For a long time now, Old Norse literature has often been colonized and misappropriated by modern rig...
Prior to the Norwegian annexation, Icelandic society lacked a government with an executive branch. A...
The transition from a semiotic system of textual comprehension to a system of internal structural bo...
Medieval Icelandic law has been appropriated for modern purposes as diverse as creating a history fo...
Njáls saga is the best known and most highly regarded of all medieval Icelandic sagas and it occupie...
Abstract The aim of this essay is to understand the view of man as a creature in the Norse culture b...
THESIS 11450The ?slendingaso?gur, or Icelandic family sagas, represent a deeply introspective cultur...
Heimskringla is the best known and most important book of Old Norse kings' sagas. A medieval masterp...
Combining an accessible approach with innovative scholarship, An Introduction to the Sagas of Icelan...
The corpus of sagas known under the genre fornaldarsögur has appeared sporadically within academia f...
Absract In the field of medieval Icelandic studies, "the oral tradition" refers to the accumulated a...