Critical Approaches to Sjon: North of the Sun is the first English-language book-length study of the works of the Icelandic contemporary poet Sjon (Sigurjon Birgir Sigur?sson, b. 1962), who is considered by some to be Iceland's most distinctive and multifaceted contemporary author. This collection of essays introduces readers to Sjon's rich body of writing and its transmedial and stylistic range, cultural breadth, thematic diversity, and intellectual depth. Essays in the volume have been brought together from around the world and cover Sjons's beginnings as a neo-surrealist performance artist and poet (translated into over 20 languages), his career as a novelist (translated into over 30 languages), and his collaborations with translators, singer-songwriters, film directors, and other writers. Approaches range from the narratological, historical, ethical, epistemological, and mythological to theoretical methodologies such as thing theory, queer theory, disability studies, and ecocriticism.
Rezensionen / Stimmen
'With his multifaceted output ranging from the tale of a shape-shifting fox to a Viking revenge epic, Sjon is one of the most creative figures in Scandinavia - and in the world - today. In this capacious collection of essays, readers and moviegoers who have encountered Sjon in one of his many metamorphoses will find illuminating insights into the full range of the work of the writer whose name means "Vision."'
David Damrosch, Ernest Bernbaum Professor of Comparative Literature, Harvard University
'Since I first discovered his books, few authors have fascinated and puzzled me more than Sjon. This anthology offers invaluable insights, concepts and tools for all readers who have ever had the immense pleasure of getting lost in his dark, funny, morbid, surreal, beautiful, and stunningly original works.'
Anders M. Gullestad, Associate Professor of Scandinavian Literature, University of Bergen
'Admirers of Sjon's written artistry are well-served by this volume's timely gathering of capable Icelandic and international critics and writers. Using diverse theoretical methodologies, these lucid examinations illumine Sjon's weird-and-wonderful imaginary, the strangeness of its ordinariness, its philosophical and ethical conundrums, and its abiding sensitivity toward life's misfits and marginals.'
Anne Brydon, ethnographer and cultural analyst, Wilfrid Laurier University
'By bringing together experts from various theoretical backgrounds, and by harmonizing their insights into a finely structured framework, the book Critical Approaches to Sjon skillfully navigates its reader through the multifaceted world of one of the most intriguing artists of today. It is an invaluable resource for both academics and fans of Sjon's art, and I gladly endorse it.'
Ieva Steponaviciute Aleksiejuniene, Head of the Centre for Scandinavian Studies, Vilnius University
'A timely publication on one of the most distinctive voices in contemporary Icelandic literature. This intriguing collection of essays gives valuable insights into Sjon's labyrinthine oeuvre, which is steeped in surrealism, esotericism, fantasy, cyberpunk, folklore, and myth, and ranges from his early avant-garde poetry to his later historical novels and film scripts.'
Benedikt Hjartarson, University of Iceland
Reihe
Sprache
Verlagsort
Verlagsgruppe
Zielgruppe
Für höhere Schule und Studium
Postgraduate
Illustrationen
10 s/w Abbildungen, 10 s/w Photographien bzw. Rasterbilder
10 Halftones, black and white; 10 Illustrations, black and white
Maße
Höhe: 235 mm
Breite: 157 mm
Dicke: 20 mm
Gewicht
ISBN-13
978-1-032-58046-3 (9781032580463)
Copyright in bibliographic data and cover images is held by Nielsen Book Services Limited or by the publishers or by their respective licensors: all rights reserved.
Schweitzer Klassifikation
Linda Badley is Professor Emerita of English and Film Studies at Middle Tennessee State University.
Ulfhildur Dagsdottir is an Icelandic literature scholar.
Gitte Mose is Associate Professor Emerita at the University of Oslo.
List of Figures
List of Contributors
Acknowledgements
A Note on Translation
Introduction
Linda Badley, Ulfhildur Dagsdottir, and Gitte Mose
Part I: The Voices of Sjon
1. The Pleasures and Challenges of Recreating Sjon's Voice
Victoria Cribb
2. The Author is In: Moonstone, Authorship, Reading, and Intertextuality (or The Boy Who Became a Story)
Ulfhildur Dagsdottir
Part II: Surrealism
3. Oh! Sjon, the Poet 1978-1986
Erik Skyum-Nielsen
4. Sjon's Nuclear Dystopia: Reflections on Stalnott, Medusa, and Johnny Triumph's Musical Career
Jon Karl Helgason
5. "Beneath the veil of happenings": Sjon, the Norse Visionary of Surrealism's Deep History
Delia Ungureanu
Part III: Transmedia, Miscellanea
6. Moonstone: The Cinema that Always Was
Janica Tomic
7. Sjon at the Movies
Bjoern Nordfjoerd
8. The Drop Tower, the Roller Coaster, the Whirling Cups: Sjon-Miscellanea and Things
Gitte Mose
Part IV: History, Ethics, Politics, and Storytelling
9. Sjon and the Long Icelandic Medieval Past
Carolyne Larrington
10. Transnational and Counter-Memorial Practices: Antisemitism, Nationalism, and the Second World War in Sjon's Works
Gunn?orunn Gu?mundsdottir
11. The Narratable Self: Natality and the Politics of Storytelling in CoDex 1962
Anne Fogarty
Part V: Queer Ecologies: Hybridity, Disability, Ecopoetics
12. The End of the World as We Know It: Queerness and Utopias in Sjon's Poetry and Prose
Asta Kristin Benediktsdottir
13. Human-Animal Bodies in The Blue Fox and CoDex1962
Avril Tynan
14. Sjonian Ecopoetics
Linda Badley
Epilogue: Sjon in His Own Voice
Appendix: A Chronology of Sjon's Life and Writings
Index