Miller, William Ian. How Not to End a Saga, Unless...: Chapters 146–59

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  • Author: Miller, William Ian
  • Title: How Not to End a Saga, Unless...: Chapters 146–59
  • Published in: Why Is Your Axe Bloody?: A Reading of Njáls Saga
  • Place, Publisher: New York: Oxford University Press
  • Year: 2014
  • Pages: 294-300
  • E-text:
  • Reference: Miller, William Ian. Why Is Your Axe Bloody?: A Reading of Njáls Saga. New York: Oxford University Press, 2014.

  • Key words:

Annotation

This chapter attempts to deal with what Miller sees as an unsatisfying ending to the masterful Njáls saga. He suggests several solutions for the saga’s protracted ending; the first being an excuse to insert Þorsteinn Hallsson‘s witty shoe-tying line into the saga; the second being that the final scenes, heavily influenced by Christian motifs, have a palinodic, or renunciatory function; Miller‘s final explanation, influenced by an M.A. student of his, suggests that the final killings are meant to eradicate negative retellings of the burnings. Miller finally dismisses this explanation as well since it does not explain what he sees as the bad match between Kári and Hildigunnr, and states that perhaps the author simply did not know how to conclude his own saga.

Lýsing

See also

References

Chapter 155: að segja söguna: "But the key point is that Kari's mission is no longer about avenging his son, but about repressing alternate versions of the saga." (p. 298).

Chapter 159: Hildigunni : "The author seems to have trouble figuring out how to end his saga. The marriage of Hildigunn to Kari is improbable and perfunctory, as if he were throwing up his hands in despair at how to bring his story to a close." (p. 294).

Links

  • Written by: Yoav Tirosh
  • Icelandic/English translation: