The article concerns the ghost story of Eyrbyggja saga, the so-called ‘wonders of Fróðá’ (Fróðárundr), and examines the symbolic meanings of this episode as they were interpreted in medieval Iceland. The analysis presupposes that, although the restless dead could be understood as ‘real’ by medieval readers and as part of their social reality, the heterogenic nature of the audience and the learning of the writers of the sagas made possible various interpretations of the ghost-scene, both literal and symbolic. It is argued that the living dead in Eyrbyggja saga act as agents of order, whose restlessness is connected to past deeds of those still living that have caused social diseq...
Viðhorf til líkamans í frásögnum af dauða ýmissa Íslendinga og norskra konunga hefur lengi verið umf...
The goal of this project is to understand the realities of how magic was perceived during a Christia...
This presentation examines two Icelandic Sagas, Thidrandi Whom the Goddesses Slew and Hen-Thorir ...
If the dead will not stay dead, what can you count on? The better question may be: Why aren’t the de...
This anthology of international scholarship offers new critical approaches to the study of the many ...
This study examines supernatural references in medieval Icelandic literature in light of modern Icel...
The article examines cultural conceptions of the possible afterlives of suicides in medieval (ca. 12...
In this chapter, we examine beliefs, stories, and sightings of and about ghosts, both historical and...
The article examines cultural conceptions of the possible afterlives of suicides in medieval (ca....
Thesis Abstract. The purpose of this thesis is to examine Old English and Old Icelandic literary e...
The corpus of texts surviving from medieval Scandinavia which contain, or purport to contain, pre-Ch...
In this thesis, I investigate representations of adolescent and elderly sexuality from throughout th...
Stories of revenants have been the topic of various fields of study. Mostly they are regarded as plo...
Draugar are among the several different supernatural creatures that appear in Saga Literature. Previ...
In medieval literature monstrous bodies form an integral part of the supernatural. Some are simply u...
Viðhorf til líkamans í frásögnum af dauða ýmissa Íslendinga og norskra konunga hefur lengi verið umf...
The goal of this project is to understand the realities of how magic was perceived during a Christia...
This presentation examines two Icelandic Sagas, Thidrandi Whom the Goddesses Slew and Hen-Thorir ...
If the dead will not stay dead, what can you count on? The better question may be: Why aren’t the de...
This anthology of international scholarship offers new critical approaches to the study of the many ...
This study examines supernatural references in medieval Icelandic literature in light of modern Icel...
The article examines cultural conceptions of the possible afterlives of suicides in medieval (ca. 12...
In this chapter, we examine beliefs, stories, and sightings of and about ghosts, both historical and...
The article examines cultural conceptions of the possible afterlives of suicides in medieval (ca....
Thesis Abstract. The purpose of this thesis is to examine Old English and Old Icelandic literary e...
The corpus of texts surviving from medieval Scandinavia which contain, or purport to contain, pre-Ch...
In this thesis, I investigate representations of adolescent and elderly sexuality from throughout th...
Stories of revenants have been the topic of various fields of study. Mostly they are regarded as plo...
Draugar are among the several different supernatural creatures that appear in Saga Literature. Previ...
In medieval literature monstrous bodies form an integral part of the supernatural. Some are simply u...
Viðhorf til líkamans í frásögnum af dauða ýmissa Íslendinga og norskra konunga hefur lengi verið umf...
The goal of this project is to understand the realities of how magic was perceived during a Christia...
This presentation examines two Icelandic Sagas, Thidrandi Whom the Goddesses Slew and Hen-Thorir ...