Friday, June 15, 2012

Pg. 99: David Clark's "Gender, Violence, and the Past in Edda and Saga"

The current feature at the Page 99 Test: Gender, Violence, and the Past in Edda and Saga by David Clark.

About the book, from the publisher:
Gender, Violence, and the Past in Edda and Saga is the first book to investigate both the relation between gender and violence in the Old Norse Poetic Edda and key family and contemporary sagas, and the interrelated nature of these genres. Beginning with an analysis of eddaic attitudes to heroic violence and its gendered nature through the figures of Gutrun and Helgi, the study broadens out to the whole poetic compilation and how the past (and particularly the mythological past) inflects the heroic present. This paves the way for a consideration of the comparable relationship between the heroic poems themselves and later reworkings of them or allusions to them in the family and contemporary sagas. The book's thematic concentration on gender/sexuality and violence, and its generic concentration on Poetic Edda and later texts which rework or allude to it, enable a diverse but coherent exploration of both key and neglected Norse texts and the way in which their authors display a dual fascination with and rejection of heroic vengeance.
Learn more about Gender, Violence, and the Past in Edda and Saga at the Oxford University Press website.

The Page 99 Test: Gender, Violence, and the Past in Edda and Saga.

--Marshal Zeringue