Ármann Jakobsson. Our Norwegian Friend: The Role of Kings in the Family Saga

From WikiSaga
Revision as of 16:47, 2 November 2011 by Jón Karl Helgason (talk | contribs)
Jump to navigationJump to search
  • Author: Ármann Jakobsson
  • Title: Our Norwegian Friend: The Role of Kings in the Family Saga
  • Published in: Arkiv för nordisk filologi 117
  • Place, Publisher: n/a
  • Year: 2002
  • Pages: 145-60
  • E-text:
  • Reference: Ármann Jakobsson. "Our Norwegian Friend: The Role of Kings in the Family Saga." Arkiv för nordisk filologi 117 (2002): 145-160.

  • Key words: literary elements, history, social reality (samfélagsmynd, bókmenntaleg einkenni, sagnfræði)


Annotation

Jakobsson examines how extensively and how favourably kings are portrayed in the Family Sagas, both individually and collectively. He draws on many saga sources, including Egils saga which is the earliest known source for the version of history whereby King Haraldr is cast “as an indirect ‘father’ of Iceland, maintaining that it was his oppression which drove most of the settlers to Iceland” (p. 149). While Egils saga portrays kings in a negative light, its hero’s faults are also exposed, thus tempering the audience’s lack of sympathy for the kings.

Lýsing

Ármann kannar hve víða og í hve jákvæðu ljósi Noregskonungum er lýst í Íslendingasögunum, bæði sem einstaklingum og hópi. Hann vinnur með margvíslegar heimildir, þar á meðal Eglu sem er elsta heimildin sem gefur þá mynd af Haraldi konungi að hann sé "óbeinn 'faðir' Íslands", þar sem það hafi verið yfirgangur hans sem rak flesta landnámsmenn Íslands af stað (s. 149). Enda þótt konungum sé lýst með neikvæðum hætti eru gallar íslensku söguhetjunnar einnig afhjúpaðir, þannig að andúð lesenda á konungi verður ekki of einhliða.


See also

References

Links

  • Written by: Jane Appleton
  • Icelandic translation: Jón Karl Helgason