Rethinking the saga of the people of Svarfadardal: or the mysterious death of a godi

From the Icelandic Svarfaðardalur translates to “unruly valley.” The Saga of the People of Svarfadardal proves to be all of this while touching on issues of political power, loyalty and honor. The complexities of the saga have traditionally posed problems that restricted an understanding of the te...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Sexton, Linda Lee
Other Authors: Bjarnadottir, Birna (Icelandic)
Published: 2012
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/1993/5277
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spelling ndltd-MANITOBA-oai-mspace.lib.umanitoba.ca-1993-52772014-01-31T03:32:51Z Rethinking the saga of the people of Svarfadardal: or the mysterious death of a godi Sexton, Linda Lee Bjarnadottir, Birna (Icelandic) Tole, George (English, Film, & Theatre) Jakobsson, Armann (University of Iceland) Buchan, John Peter (Icelandic) medieval saga From the Icelandic Svarfaðardalur translates to “unruly valley.” The Saga of the People of Svarfadardal proves to be all of this while touching on issues of political power, loyalty and honor. The complexities of the saga have traditionally posed problems that restricted an understanding of the text while barring shape to the characters. The saga leads its audience through events that when interpreted, can vary through individual viewpoint and experience, putting audience analysis at the core of Svarfdæla. From its scattered, inconsistent beginnings, the study presented here shows the path taken by each character through to the saga’s finish. Each character is permitted a consistency to their persona, allowing their interaction with one another coherency. In the end, Yngvild Fair-cheek and her infamous words take on a valid and realistic purpose, releasing her of her cold-hearted image. 2012-04-09T16:59:58Z 2012-04-09T16:59:58Z 2012-04-09 http://hdl.handle.net/1993/5277
collection NDLTD
sources NDLTD
topic medieval
saga
spellingShingle medieval
saga
Sexton, Linda Lee
Rethinking the saga of the people of Svarfadardal: or the mysterious death of a godi
description From the Icelandic Svarfaðardalur translates to “unruly valley.” The Saga of the People of Svarfadardal proves to be all of this while touching on issues of political power, loyalty and honor. The complexities of the saga have traditionally posed problems that restricted an understanding of the text while barring shape to the characters. The saga leads its audience through events that when interpreted, can vary through individual viewpoint and experience, putting audience analysis at the core of Svarfdæla. From its scattered, inconsistent beginnings, the study presented here shows the path taken by each character through to the saga’s finish. Each character is permitted a consistency to their persona, allowing their interaction with one another coherency. In the end, Yngvild Fair-cheek and her infamous words take on a valid and realistic purpose, releasing her of her cold-hearted image.
author2 Bjarnadottir, Birna (Icelandic)
author_facet Bjarnadottir, Birna (Icelandic)
Sexton, Linda Lee
author Sexton, Linda Lee
author_sort Sexton, Linda Lee
title Rethinking the saga of the people of Svarfadardal: or the mysterious death of a godi
title_short Rethinking the saga of the people of Svarfadardal: or the mysterious death of a godi
title_full Rethinking the saga of the people of Svarfadardal: or the mysterious death of a godi
title_fullStr Rethinking the saga of the people of Svarfadardal: or the mysterious death of a godi
title_full_unstemmed Rethinking the saga of the people of Svarfadardal: or the mysterious death of a godi
title_sort rethinking the saga of the people of svarfadardal: or the mysterious death of a godi
publishDate 2012
url http://hdl.handle.net/1993/5277
work_keys_str_mv AT sextonlindalee rethinkingthesagaofthepeopleofsvarfadardalorthemysteriousdeathofagodi
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