The origins of many of the Icelandic sagas have long been the subject of critical speculation and controversy. This book demonstrates that an investigation of the relationship between verse and prose in saga narrative can be used to reconstruct how Icelandic sagas were composed; to this end it provides a detailed analysis of Kormaks saga, whose hero Kormakr is one of the most celebrated of Icelandic poets. Over sixty of his passionate, cryptic skaldic stanzas are quoted in the saga, and the way they and the saga prose are fitted together reveals that Kormaks saga, far from being a seamless narrative of either pre-Christian oral tradition or later medieval fiction, is in fact a patchwork of different kinds of literary materials. This book offers an original and productive way of understanding not only the compositional method and distinctive aesthetic qualities of Kormaks saga, but also the genesis of many other Icelandic saga narratives.
Rezensionen / Stimmen
This study is undoubtedly an important contribution to our understanding of saga poetics. * Claudia Bornholdt Medium AEvum *
Reihe
Sprache
Verlagsort
Verlagsgruppe
Zielgruppe
Produkt-Hinweis
Fadenheftung
Gewebe-Einband
Maße
Höhe: 216 mm
Breite: 140 mm
Dicke: 16 mm
Gewicht
ISBN-13
978-0-19-811783-4 (9780198117834)
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Schweitzer Klassifikation
Autor*in
Fellow and Tutor in English Language and Medieval LiteratureFellow and Tutor in English Language and Medieval Literature, Somerville College, Oxford
Introduction to the saga: the saga's structure; the saga author; possible sources. Kormakr's courtship: the first meeting (verses 1-10); Nrfi (verses 11-14); the ambush (verses 15-19); the betrothal (verses 20-1). Kormakr and Bersi: the failure of the marriage agreement; the pursuit of the bride (verses 22-6); Bersi's duel with Kormakr (verses 27-35). The Bersi "digression": how the Bersi material is woven into the saga; how Bersi's verses are arranged in the prose (verses 36-50). Porvaldr tinteinn: Steingerdr's second marriage (verses 51-2); Kormakr's exploits abroad (verses 52-58); Kormakr's reunion with Steingerdr (verses 59-63); the false insult verse (verses 64-5); the duels (verses 66-75). The final stages: Kormakr and Steingerdr in Norway (verses 76-81); Kormakr's death (verses 82-85). Conclusions, the genesis of a saga narrative: the saga's component parts; the saga as a whole.