Viking Mediologies: A New History of Skaldic Poetics

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Viking Mediologies is a study of pre-modern multimedia rooted in the embodied poetic practice of Viking Age skalds. Prior study of the skaldic tradition has focused on authorship―distinctions of poetic style, historical contexts, and attention to the oeuvres of the skalds whose names are preserved in the written tradition. Kate Heslop reconsiders these not as texts but as pieces in a pre-modern media landscape, focusing on poetry’s medial capacity to embody memory, visuality, and sound.

Mobile, hybrid, diasporic social formations―bands of raiders and traders, petty kingdoms, colonial expeditions―achieved new prominence in the Viking Age. Skalds offered the leaders of these groups something uniquely valuable. With their complicated poetry, they claimed to be able to capture shared contingent meanings and re-mediate them in named, memorable, reproducible works. The commemorative poetry in
kviðuháttr remembers histories of ruin and loss. Skaldic ekphrasis discloses and reproduces the presence of the gods. Dróttkvætt encomium evokes for the leader’s retinue the soundscape of battle.

As writing arrived in Scandinavia in the wake of Christianization, the media landscape shifted. In the poetry of the twelfth and thirteenth centuries, skalds adjusted to the demands of a literate audience, while the historical and poetological texts of the Icelandic High Middle Ages opened a dialogue between Latin Christian ideas of mediation and local traditions. In the
Second Grammatical Treatise, for example, the literate technology of the grid is used to analyze the complex resonances of dróttkvætt as the output of a syllable-spewing hurdy-gurdy―a poetry machine.

Offering both new readings of both canonical works such as
Ynglingatal, Ragnarsdrápa, and Háttatal, and examinations of lesser-known texts like Glymdrápa, Líknarbraut, and Sturla Þórðarson’s Hákonarkviða, Viking Mediologies explores the powers and limits of poetic mediation.

Author(s): Kate Heslop
Series: Fordham Series in Medieval Studies
Publisher: Fordham University Press
Year: 2022

Language: English
Pages: 288
City: New York

Cover
Series Page
Title Page
Copyright
Contents
General Abbreviations
Abbreviations for Poets and Poems
Acknowledgments
Introduction
Part 1. Making Memories
Rök and Ynglingatal
1. Death in Place
2. Forging the Chain
Stone—Stanza—Memory
Part 2. Seeing Things
3. The Viking Eye
4. Seeing, Knowing, and Believing in the Prose Edda
Part 3. Hearing Voices
5. The Noise of Poetry
6. A Poetry Machine
Conclusion
Notes
References
Index
About the Author
Series List
Color Plates