Falk, Oren. *Konutorrek, “irreparable Loss Of Wife”: Difference between revisions
From WikiSaga
Jump to navigationJump to search
No edit summary |
No edit summary |
||
Line 12: | Line 12: | ||
==Annotation== | ==Annotation== | ||
Medievalists are acutely aware of the importance of widows; widowers, in contrast, have attracted | |||
little scholarly attention. Through examination of several widowers profiled in the Icelandic Egils | little scholarly attention. Through examination of several widowers profiled in the Icelandic Egils | ||
saga, this article probes into the subducted experience of medieval Norse widowerhood. Saga authors | saga, this article probes into the subducted experience of medieval Norse widowerhood. Saga authors |
Revision as of 10:49, 16 August 2016
- Author: Falk, Oren
- Title: *Konutorrek, “irreparable Loss Of Wife”: Egils Saga’s Absent Husband’s Lament
- Published in: Viator 45/3
- Year: 2014
- Pages: 59-88
- E-text: Brepols
- Reference: Falk, Oren. "*Konutorrek, “irreparable Loss Of Wife”: Egils Saga’s Absent Husband’s Lament." Viator 45/3 (2014): 59-88.
- Key words:
Annotation
Medievalists are acutely aware of the importance of widows; widowers, in contrast, have attracted little scholarly attention. Through examination of several widowers profiled in the Icelandic Egils saga, this article probes into the subducted experience of medieval Norse widowerhood. Saga authors largely observed a cultural mandate to ignore widowers. Nevertheless, clues can be detected to their awareness of the significance of widowerhood, as well as their anxieties over its disruptive potentials. Egils saga elucidates some of the ways Norse widowerhood might go wrong and some of the cultural mechanisms devised to control it; it may even allow us a peek into the affective lives of bereaved Norse husbands.
Lýsing
See also
References
Links
- Written by: Oren Falk
- Icelandic translation: