During the 20th century, Old Norse philology has been strongly textually oriented. This is evident in saga scholarship, where the book-prose ideology turned the issue of the origin of individual sagas into an issue of direct influences from other written works. This focus has methodological advantages, but it has also meant that valuable folkloristic knowledge has been neglected. The present volume targets the advantages, the problems and the methods of using folklore material and theory in Old Norse scholarship. An important theme in folklore is the encounter with the Supernatural, and such stories are indeed common in saga literature. Generally, however, scholars have tended to focus on feuds and the social structure of the sagas, and less on encounters with Otherworld beings. In this volume, the supernatural themes in the sagas are discussed by means of several approaches, some folkloristic, some traditionally philological.
Author(s): Daniel Sävborg, Karen Bek-Pedersen
Series: Nordistica Tartuensia, 20
Publisher: University of Tartu Press
Year: 2014
Language: English
Pages: 188
City: Tartu
Daniel Sävborg, Karen Bek-Pedersen / Folklore in Old Norse – Old Norse in Folklore. Introduction 7
Aðalheiður Guðmundsdóttir / The Other World in the 'Fornaldarsögur' and in Folklore 14
Stephen A. Mitchell / Continuity: Folklore’s Problem Child? 41
Thomas A. DuBois / Anatomy of the Elite: 'Learned' vs. 'Folk' in the Analysis of Avowedly Pre-Christian Religious Elements in the Sagas 59
Karen Bek-Pedersen / Reconstruction: On Crabs, Folklore and the History of Religion 83
Annette Lassen / The Old Norse Contextuality of 'Bárðar saga Snæfellsáss': A Synoptic Reading with 'Óláfs saga Tryggvasonar en mesta' 102
Camilla Asplund Ingemark / The Trolls in 'Bárðar saga' – Playing with the Conventions of Oral Texts? 120
Ralph O’Connor / 'Bárðar saga' Between Orality and Literacy 139
Eldar Heide / 'Bárðar saga' as a Source for Reconstruction of Pre-Christian Religion? 170
Author presentations 181