The Icelandic sagas can be read and interpreted in many ways. This article examines the sagas both as literary expressions of a longstanding oral tradition and as part of a collective and cultural memory. The focus in the first part is on people and places in the sagas as ‘realms of memory’: things that help construct a common past and a common identity. The second part of the article explores the role of the sagas in medieval Iceland as ‘key myths’ that explain the origin and uniqueness of a society, and as moral and legal role models legitimizing the current social order
The article argues that Jómsvíkinga saga, despite its mixed modality, should be included in Old Nors...
Medieval Icelandic law has been appropriated for modern purposes as diverse as creating a history fo...
Medieval Icelandic law has been appropriated for modern purposes as diverse as creating a history fo...
Fiction may be imbued with a truth to life which is equal to if not superior in value to any factual...
The paper gives a short look at the development of the oral tradition in Iceland, where passing the ...
Based on the assumption that the longstanding discussion about history/fiction has exhausted itself,...
This chapter considers the role of prolegomena and authorial interventions in constraining and conte...
Doktorsritgerð varin við The University of Queensland í Brisbane, Ástralíu.The aim of this thesis is...
Medieval Icelandic law has been appropriated for modern purposes as diverse as creating a history fo...
The aim of this thesis is to show how character analysis can be used to approach conceptions of saga...
are a valuable resource in the study of society and culture in the Viking age. However, for a variet...
It is well established ethnographically that history is a particularly important and celebrated asp...
This thesis examines the memorial meaning attributed to royal power in the Icelandic legal tradition...
The article argues that Jómsvíkinga saga, despite its mixed modality, should be included in Old Nors...
The article argues that Jómsvíkinga saga, despite its mixed modality, should be included in Old Nors...
The article argues that Jómsvíkinga saga, despite its mixed modality, should be included in Old Nors...
Medieval Icelandic law has been appropriated for modern purposes as diverse as creating a history fo...
Medieval Icelandic law has been appropriated for modern purposes as diverse as creating a history fo...
Fiction may be imbued with a truth to life which is equal to if not superior in value to any factual...
The paper gives a short look at the development of the oral tradition in Iceland, where passing the ...
Based on the assumption that the longstanding discussion about history/fiction has exhausted itself,...
This chapter considers the role of prolegomena and authorial interventions in constraining and conte...
Doktorsritgerð varin við The University of Queensland í Brisbane, Ástralíu.The aim of this thesis is...
Medieval Icelandic law has been appropriated for modern purposes as diverse as creating a history fo...
The aim of this thesis is to show how character analysis can be used to approach conceptions of saga...
are a valuable resource in the study of society and culture in the Viking age. However, for a variet...
It is well established ethnographically that history is a particularly important and celebrated asp...
This thesis examines the memorial meaning attributed to royal power in the Icelandic legal tradition...
The article argues that Jómsvíkinga saga, despite its mixed modality, should be included in Old Nors...
The article argues that Jómsvíkinga saga, despite its mixed modality, should be included in Old Nors...
The article argues that Jómsvíkinga saga, despite its mixed modality, should be included in Old Nors...
Medieval Icelandic law has been appropriated for modern purposes as diverse as creating a history fo...
Medieval Icelandic law has been appropriated for modern purposes as diverse as creating a history fo...