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Viking Way: Magic and Mind in Late Iron Age Scandinavia [Kõva köide]

  • Formaat: Hardback, 432 pages, kõrgus x laius: 280x216 mm
  • Ilmumisaeg: 30-Apr-2019
  • Kirjastus: Oxbow Books
  • ISBN-10: 1842172603
  • ISBN-13: 9781842172605
Teised raamatud teemal:
  • Formaat: Hardback, 432 pages, kõrgus x laius: 280x216 mm
  • Ilmumisaeg: 30-Apr-2019
  • Kirjastus: Oxbow Books
  • ISBN-10: 1842172603
  • ISBN-13: 9781842172605
Teised raamatud teemal:
Magic, sorcery and witchcraft are among the most common themes of the great medieval Icelandic sagas and poems, the problematic yet vital sources that provide our primary textual evidence for the Viking Age that they claim to describe.

Magic, sorcery and witchcraft are among the most common themes of the great medieval Icelandic sagas and poems, the problematic yet vital sources that provide our primary textual evidence for the Viking Age that they claim to describe. Yet despite the consistency of this picture, surprisingly little archaeological or historical research has been done to explore what this may really have meant to the men and women of the time. This book examines the evidence for Old Norse sorcery, looking at its meaning and function, practice and practitioners, and the complicated constructions of gender and sexual identity with which these were underpinned. Combining strong elements of eroticism and aggression, sorcery appears as a fundamental domain of women's power, linking them with the gods, the dead and the future. Their battle spells and combat rituals complement the men's physical acts of fighting, in a supernatural empowerment of the Viking way of life. What emerges is a fundamentally new image of the world in which the Vikings understood themselves to move, in which magic and its implications permeated every aspect of a society permanently geared for war. In this fully-revised and expanded second edition, Neil Price takes us with him on a tour through the sights and sounds of this undiscovered country, meeting its human and otherworldly inhabitants, including the Sami with whom the Norse partly shared this mental landscape. On the way we explore Viking notions of the mind and soul, the fluidity of the boundaries that they drew between humans and animals, and the immense variety of their spiritual beliefs. We find magic in the Vikings' bedrooms and on their battlefields, and we meet the sorcerers themselves through their remarkable burials and the tools of their trade. Combining archaeology, history and literary scholarship with extensive studies of Germanic and circumpolar religion, this multi-award-winning book shows us the Vikings as we have never seen them before.

Arvustused

This is a brilliant and beautifully written book, as evidenced, for instance, by Prices evocative retelling of Ragnarkr in Chapter 2. The first edition of Viking Way was a watershed publication for Viking archaeology, and as it has now been updated and extended, this book will only cement its position as a truly fundamental piece of scholarship painting a much richer, more complex, and more disconcerting picture of what are frequently caricatured and romanticized people. The Viking Way will undoubtedly be read, cited, and remembered for a very long time. * Early Medieval Europe * The Viking Way is a saga-like page-turner. [ ] It was the most important work to have been published on Norse magic when I first read it in 2002. In this second, revised and expanded edition, Price sets the benchmark for research on the Viking Way for at least another twenty years. * Time & Mind: the Journal of Archaeology, Consciousness and Culture. * The Viking Way is a precious and detailed handbook in every respect [ ] the book is a first-rank culture history of the Vikings. * Shaman * Prices easy-to-read writing style allows the study to clearly present and explain an assortment of complicated subject matters, which in turn makes these intricate topics more accessible for a varied audience [ ] Ultimately, this book remains one of the most influential studies on the Viking Age * Kyngervi * In summary, readers will be pleased by this new edition in that it largely preserves the much sought-after first edition while simultaneously updating some pieces of information and adding over 500 new references to relevant works published since the first edition, some new photographs and illustrations, and an index. * Journal of English and Germanic Philology *

List of figures and tables

Abbreviations

Preface and acknowledgements to the first edition

Preface and acknowledgements to the second edition

A note on language

A note on seid

1. Different Vikings? Towards a cognitive archaeology of the later Iron Age

A beginning at Birka

Textual archaeology and the Iron Age

The Other and the Odd?

An archaeology of the Viking mind?

2. Problems and paradigms in the study of Old Norse sorcery

Entering the mythology

Research perspectives on Scandinavian pre-Christian religion

Gods and monsters, worship and superstition

The shape of Old Norse religion

The double world: seiðr and the problem of Old Norse magic

Seiðr in the sources

Seiðr in research

3. Seiðr

Óðinn

Freyja and the magic of the Vanir

Seiðr and Old Norse cosmology

The performers

The performance

Engendering seiðr

Seiðr and the concept of the soul

The domestic sphere of seiðr

Seiðr contextualised

4. Noaidevuohta

Seiðr and the Sámi

Sámi-Norse relations in the Viking Age

Sámi religion and the Drum-Time

Rydvings terminology of noaidevuohta

Women and noaidevuohta

The rituals of noaidevuohta

The ethnicity of religious context in Viking-Age Scandinavia

5. Circumpolar religion and the question of Old Norse shamanism

The circumpolar cultures and the invention of shamanism

The shamanic world-view

Shamanism in Scandinavia

Seiðr and circumpolar shamanism

6. The supernatural empowerment of aggression

Seiðr and the world of war

Valkyrjur, skaldmeyjar and hjálmvitr

Supernatural agency in battle

The projection of destruction

Battle magic

Seiðr and the shifting of shape

Berserkir and ulfheðnar

Ecstasy, psychic dislocation and the dynamics of mass violence

Weaving war, grinding battle: Darraðarljóð and Grottasongr in context

7. The Viking way

A reality in stories

Viking women, Viking men

8. Magic and mind

Receptions and reactions

Cracks in the ice of Norse religion

Walking into the seiðr: contested interpretations of Viking-Age magic

Queering magic?

The social world of war

The Viking mind: a conclusion

References

Primary sources, including translations

Pre-nineteenth-century sources for the early Sámi and Siberian cultures

Secondary sources

Sources in archive

Index
by Neil Price