1.

Record Nr.

UNINA9910688431503321

Autore

Bryan Eric Shane

Titolo

Icelandic folklore and the cultural memory of religious change / / Eric Shane Bryan

Pubbl/distr/stampa

Leeds, [UK] : , : Arc Humanities Press, , 2021

Descrizione fisica

1 online resource (162 pages)

Collana

Borderlines (Leeds, England)

Disciplina

398.094912

Soggetti

Folklore - Iceland

Folk literature, Icelandic

Lingua di pubblicazione

Inglese

Formato

Materiale a stampa

Livello bibliografico

Monografia

Nota di contenuto

Stories, memories, and mechanisms of belief -- The dead bridegroom carries off his bride: pejoration and adjacency pairs in ATU 365 -- The elf woman's conversion: memories of gender and gender spheres -- The Fylgjur of Iceland: attendant spirits and a distorted sense of guardianship -- The elf church: memories of contested sacred spaces -- The stupid boy and the devil: Sæmundur fróđi Sigfússon, magic, and redemption.

Sommario/riassunto

"Nearly all recent examinations of Icelandic (and Scandinavian) folklore from the nineteenth century and earlier have concerned themselves with the origins and production of folktales rather than with the cultural implications of their content. This volume extends those discussions by offering an interdisciplinary methodology that weaves together the literature, religious and political history, and other cultural phenomena that have impacted folk narratives as evidence of the emergent cultural memory of a society undergoing the religious developments of Christianization and Reformation. Iceland's uncommon proclivity towards storytelling, its robust tradition of medieval manuscripts, and the "re-oralization" of those narratives after the medieval period, create a body of folktales and legends that have encoded a hidden account of how orthodox and heterodox beliefs (sometimes pagan in origin) intermingled as Christianity, and later Reformation, spread through the North. This volume unlocks that secret story by placing Icelandic folktales in a context of religious



doctrine, social history, and Old Norse sagas and poetry. The analysis herein reveals a cultural memory of belief."--