Myth, materiality, and lived religion: in Merovingian and Viking Scandinavia

The authors of the present volume, Myth, Materiality, and Lived Religion, focus on the material dimension of Old Norse mythology and the role played by myths in everyday life. More broadly expressed, the collection looks at the social, ceremonial and material contexts of myths. This topic has been u...

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Bibliographische Detailangaben
Weitere Verfasser: Wikström af Edholm, Klas 1988- (HerausgeberIn), Jackson Rova, Peter (HerausgeberIn), Nordberg, Andreas 1971- (HerausgeberIn), Sundqvist, Olof 1959- (HerausgeberIn), Zachrisson, Torun 1960- (HerausgeberIn)
Format: Tagungsbericht Buch
Sprache:English
Veröffentlicht: Stockholm Stockholm University Press [2019]
Schriftenreihe:Stockholm studies in comparative religion (SSCR) [40]
Schlagworte:
Zusammenfassung:The authors of the present volume, Myth, Materiality, and Lived Religion, focus on the material dimension of Old Norse mythology and the role played by myths in everyday life. More broadly expressed, the collection looks at the social, ceremonial and material contexts of myths. This topic has been underexplored in previous research on Old Norse myths, despite its important theoretical implications. However, discussions around materiality, in a more general sense, have for a long time been significant for historians of religion, especially archaeologists. Myth, Materiality, and Lived Religion seeks to make the case for the relevance of materiality to literary historians and philologists as well. Questions relating to the theme of materiality and lived religion are posed in this book, including: What do myths tell us about the material culture of the periods in which they were narrated? What role did myths or mythical beings play in connection to, for instance, illnesses and remedies during the Viking Period and the Middle Ages? How did ordinary people experience participation in a more formal sacrificial feast led by ritual specialists? The editors of this book are all associated with the Department of Ethnology, History of Religions and Genders Studies at Stockholm University, Sweden.
Gold is red : Sigurõarkviða en skamma 49-50 / Merrill Kaplan, Response by Agneta Ney -- Halls, gods, and giants : The enigma of Gullveig in Óðinn 's Hall / Tommy Kuusela, Response by Eldar Heide -- Mercury-Wotan - Óðinn : One or many? / Jens Peter Schjødt, Response by Peter Jackson Rova -- Myth on stone and tapestry : Ragnarøk in pictures? / Anders Hultgård, Response by John Lindow -- Ormhäxan, dragons, parturition and tradition / Stephen Mitchell, Response by Judy Quinn -- Re-interpretations of Gotlandic picture stones based on the reflectance transformation imaging method (RTI) : Some examples / Sigmund Oehrl, Response by Anne-Sofie Gräslund -- Gold foil figures and Norse mythology : Fact and fiction? / Margrethe Watt, Response by Olof Sundqvist -- Finitude : Human and animal sacrifice in a Norse setting / Christina Fredengren and Camilla Löfqvist, Response by Klas Wikstrom af Edholm -- Understanding embodiment through lived religion : A look at vernacular physiologies in an Old Norse milieu / Frog, Response by Margaret Clunies Ross -- Animals and the Blót in the Old Norse sources and ritual depositions of bones from archaeological sites / Ola Magnell, Response by Kristin Armstrong Oma -- Configurations of religion in late Iron Age and Viking Age Scandinavia / Andreas Nordberg, Response by Maths Bertell -- Tangible religion : Amulets, illnesses, and the demonic seven sisters / Rudolf Simek, Response by Olaf Sundqvist -- What does Óðinn do to the Túnriðor? An interpretation of Hávamál / Frederik Wallenstein,Response by Terry Gunnell.
Beschreibung:Bearbetade bidrag och kommentarer från konferens, Stockholm, 4-5 november 2015.
Altnordisch Wikinger Mythos Religion Literatur Opfer <Religion> BV046436759
Beschreibung:viii, 438 Seiten Illustrationen, Diagramme
ISBN:9789176350997

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