塑造我们思维方式的北欧神话》,卡洛琳-拉林顿著(评论)

IF 0.5 3区 社会学 0 LITERATURE, BRITISH ISLES
Tim William Machan
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But as the book shows, this moment has been happening almost since the Viking age itself, informing multiple media across the centuries with myths that assume context specific shapes and always suggest an intensity of response shared by no other mythic tradition. It may be, Larrington notes, that 'Old Norse myths and legends … offer ways of thinking about the world, about time, history and fate, that we do not find in the more culturally central Greek and Roman myths' (p. 8). And their continued moment also may be rooted in, as she stresses throughout the book, the intensity and familiarity of the human qualities they display: folly, wisdom, hatred, love, envy, vengeance, fallibility. Reasonably enough, Larrington focuses on the Anglophone tradition, but, perhaps because of these familiar qualities, the Norse moment has spanned continents, peoples, and language traditions, making the recent film <em>Thor: Love and Thunder</em> a worldwide box office hit.</p> <p>Two qualities distinguish <em>The Norse Myths That Shape the Way We Think</em> and will make the book of interest to a wide audience, particularly one of non-specialists. The first is the clarity of its organization, which is no small accomplishment given the scope and discordant nature of primary Norse documents like poems, sagas, and rune stones. Put another way, there is not (and almost certainly never was) a coherent, synoptic mythos but rather scattered riffs on recurrent themes, stories, and characters. Accordingly, the book is arranged around what might be called umbrella topics that will be familiar to (say) viewers of recent medieval Norse film: <em>Valhöll, Óðinn, Þórr, Loki, Vikings and Bererkers, Sigurðr the Dragon-Slayer, Ragnarr Shaggy-Breeches, Vinland</em>, and the <em>Ragna rök</em>. Particular novels, poems, or films might appear in each chapter, but in this arrangement, they are treated not as free-standing works but as participants in larger traditions. The reader thus gets a sense of how Þórr and the rest have been reimagined across time—of the continuities as well as inconsistencies.</p> <p>The book's second distinguishing quality is its breadth. Focusing on the past two centuries, <em>The Norse Myths</em> explores a range of poems, musical adaptations, novels, and (of late) films that take their inspiration from Viking-age stories. Some of these adaptations, such as Longfellow's 'The Skeleton in Armor' or the novels of George Martin, are familiar but many are not; I at least did not know of the seventeenth-century Dane Thomas Barthol, who wrote three books in Latin about the character of his historical forebearers. Some titles and individuals figure prominently throughout: Richard Wagner, Neil Gaiman, and <em>Game of Thrones</em>, for example. Other modern scholars and popularizers have written about the transformation of Norse materials into contemporary stories, but I know of no other book that has the range this one does. Larrington thus provides a kind of compendium of Norse riffs and thereby a shortcut into primary materials for anyone interested in pursuing the topics further.</p> <p>Perhaps for a general book directed at a general audience, it would be inappropriate for <em>The Norse Myths</em> to engage fully with the continued political and social ramifications of the appropriation of the Norse material. Not only in the past two centuries but since the early modern period, when English historiographers in a sense discovered <strong>[End Page 71]</strong> the Norse past, Óðinn and the Viking temperament have played crucial roles in the formation of ethnicity and cultural identity. Someone like William Morris might seem a long way from Richard Wagner, but they shared the notion that the Viking past could be remade in ways to justify an often exclusionary present. These are the same approaches that lead to thinking that is implicitly white supremacist already in the nineteenth century and explicitly so in the past...</p> </p>","PeriodicalId":43123,"journal":{"name":"Arthuriana","volume":"86 1","pages":""},"PeriodicalIF":0.5000,"publicationDate":"2023-12-14","publicationTypes":"Journal Article","fieldsOfStudy":null,"isOpenAccess":false,"openAccessPdf":"","citationCount":"0","resultStr":"{\"title\":\"The Norse Myths That Shape the Way We Think by Carolyne Larrington (review)\",\"authors\":\"Tim William Machan\",\"doi\":\"10.1353/art.2023.a915340\",\"DOIUrl\":null,\"url\":null,\"abstract\":\"<span><span>In lieu of</span> an abstract, here is a brief excerpt of the content:</span>\\n<p> <span>Reviewed by:</span> <ul> <li><!-- html_title --> <em>The Norse Myths That Shape the Way We Think</em> by Carolyne Larrington <!-- /html_title --></li> <li> Tim William Machan </li> </ul> <small>carolyne larrington</small>, <em>The Norse Myths That Shape the Way We Think</em>. 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Accordingly, the book is arranged around what might be called umbrella topics that will be familiar to (say) viewers of recent medieval Norse film: <em>Valhöll, Óðinn, Þórr, Loki, Vikings and Bererkers, Sigurðr the Dragon-Slayer, Ragnarr Shaggy-Breeches, Vinland</em>, and the <em>Ragna rök</em>. Particular novels, poems, or films might appear in each chapter, but in this arrangement, they are treated not as free-standing works but as participants in larger traditions. The reader thus gets a sense of how Þórr and the rest have been reimagined across time—of the continuities as well as inconsistencies.</p> <p>The book's second distinguishing quality is its breadth. Focusing on the past two centuries, <em>The Norse Myths</em> explores a range of poems, musical adaptations, novels, and (of late) films that take their inspiration from Viking-age stories. Some of these adaptations, such as Longfellow's 'The Skeleton in Armor' or the novels of George Martin, are familiar but many are not; I at least did not know of the seventeenth-century Dane Thomas Barthol, who wrote three books in Latin about the character of his historical forebearers. Some titles and individuals figure prominently throughout: Richard Wagner, Neil Gaiman, and <em>Game of Thrones</em>, for example. Other modern scholars and popularizers have written about the transformation of Norse materials into contemporary stories, but I know of no other book that has the range this one does. 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引用次数: 0

摘要

代替摘要,这里是内容的简短摘录:回顾:塑造我们思维方式的北欧神话,作者:Carolyne Larrington,作者:Tim William Machan Carolyne Larrington,塑造我们思维方式的北欧神话。纽约:泰晤士和哈德逊,2023年。304页。isbn: 978 - 0500252345。34.95美元。在这本写得很好、内容丰富、引人入胜的书的开头,卡洛琳·拉灵顿(Carolyne Larrington)写道:“就像记者们喜欢说的那样,古挪威神话目前似乎正在‘经历一个时刻’”(第8页)。但正如书中所示,这个时刻几乎从维京时代就开始了,几个世纪以来,各种媒体都在用神话来传达信息,这些神话具有特定的背景,总是暗示着一种其他神话传统所没有的强烈反应。拉灵顿指出,也许“古挪威神话和传说……提供了思考世界、时间、历史和命运的方式,这是我们在文化更核心的希腊和罗马神话中找不到的”(第8页)。正如她在整本书中强调的那样,它们持续存在的时刻也可能植根于它们所展示的人类品质的强烈和熟悉:愚蠢、智慧、仇恨、爱、嫉妒、复仇、错误。拉灵顿关注的是英语国家的传统,这是合理的,但是,也许是因为这些熟悉的特质,北欧时刻跨越了大陆、民族和语言传统,使得最近的电影《雷神2:爱与雷》成为全球票房的热门。《塑造我们思维方式的北欧神话》有两个特点,这将使这本书吸引广大读者,尤其是非专业人士。首先是其组织的清晰性,这是一个不小的成就,考虑到原始挪威文献的范围和不和谐的性质,如诗歌、传奇和符文石。换句话说,没有(也几乎从来没有)一个连贯的、概括的神话,而是对反复出现的主题、故事和人物的零散重复。因此,这本书围绕着最近中世纪挪威电影的观众所熟悉的主题展开:Valhöll, Óðinn, Þórr,洛基,维京人和Bererkers,屠龙者Sigurðr, Ragnarr Shaggy-Breeches, Vinland和Ragna rök。特定的小说、诗歌或电影可能会出现在每一章中,但在这种安排下,它们不是被视为独立的作品,而是被视为更大传统的参与者。读者由此可以感受到Þórr和其他网站是如何随着时间的推移而被重新想象的——既有连续性,也有不一致性。这本书的第二个显著特点是它的广度。《北欧神话》聚焦于过去的两个世纪,探索了一系列从维京时代故事中获得灵感的诗歌、音乐改编、小说和(最近的)电影。其中一些改编作品我们很熟悉,比如朗费罗的《盔甲中的骷髅》(The Skeleton in Armor)或乔治·马丁(George Martin)的小说;我至少不知道十七世纪的丹麦人托马斯·巴托尔,他用拉丁语写了三本关于他的历史祖先的书。有些头衔和人物贯穿始终,比如理查德·瓦格纳、尼尔·盖曼和《权力的游戏》。其他现代学者和科普家也写过关于将挪威材料转化为当代故事的文章,但据我所知,没有任何一本书的涉及面能与这本书相比。因此,拉灵顿提供了一种挪威即兴片段的概要,从而为任何有兴趣进一步研究该主题的人提供了进入原始材料的捷径。也许对于一本针对普通读者的普通书籍来说,《北欧神话》不适合充分参与对北欧材料的挪用所带来的持续的政治和社会后果。不仅在过去的两个世纪里,而且从近代早期开始,当英国历史学家在某种意义上发现了挪威人的过去,Óðinn和维京人的气质在形成民族和文化认同方面发挥了至关重要的作用。像威廉·莫里斯这样的人可能看起来与理查德·瓦格纳相去甚远,但他们都认为维京人的过去可以被重塑,以证明一个经常被排斥的现在是合理的。这些都是同样的方法,导致了在19世纪就已经隐含的白人至上主义者的想法,在过去也是如此。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
The Norse Myths That Shape the Way We Think by Carolyne Larrington (review)
In lieu of an abstract, here is a brief excerpt of the content:

Reviewed by:

  • The Norse Myths That Shape the Way We Think by Carolyne Larrington
  • Tim William Machan
carolyne larrington, The Norse Myths That Shape the Way We Think. New York: Thames and Hudson, 2023. Pp. 304. isbn: 978–0500252345. $34.95.

Near the beginning of this well-written, expansive, and inviting book, Carolyne Larrington observes, 'It might seem that, as journalists like to say, Old Norse myths are currently "having a moment"' (p. 8). But as the book shows, this moment has been happening almost since the Viking age itself, informing multiple media across the centuries with myths that assume context specific shapes and always suggest an intensity of response shared by no other mythic tradition. It may be, Larrington notes, that 'Old Norse myths and legends … offer ways of thinking about the world, about time, history and fate, that we do not find in the more culturally central Greek and Roman myths' (p. 8). And their continued moment also may be rooted in, as she stresses throughout the book, the intensity and familiarity of the human qualities they display: folly, wisdom, hatred, love, envy, vengeance, fallibility. Reasonably enough, Larrington focuses on the Anglophone tradition, but, perhaps because of these familiar qualities, the Norse moment has spanned continents, peoples, and language traditions, making the recent film Thor: Love and Thunder a worldwide box office hit.

Two qualities distinguish The Norse Myths That Shape the Way We Think and will make the book of interest to a wide audience, particularly one of non-specialists. The first is the clarity of its organization, which is no small accomplishment given the scope and discordant nature of primary Norse documents like poems, sagas, and rune stones. Put another way, there is not (and almost certainly never was) a coherent, synoptic mythos but rather scattered riffs on recurrent themes, stories, and characters. Accordingly, the book is arranged around what might be called umbrella topics that will be familiar to (say) viewers of recent medieval Norse film: Valhöll, Óðinn, Þórr, Loki, Vikings and Bererkers, Sigurðr the Dragon-Slayer, Ragnarr Shaggy-Breeches, Vinland, and the Ragna rök. Particular novels, poems, or films might appear in each chapter, but in this arrangement, they are treated not as free-standing works but as participants in larger traditions. The reader thus gets a sense of how Þórr and the rest have been reimagined across time—of the continuities as well as inconsistencies.

The book's second distinguishing quality is its breadth. Focusing on the past two centuries, The Norse Myths explores a range of poems, musical adaptations, novels, and (of late) films that take their inspiration from Viking-age stories. Some of these adaptations, such as Longfellow's 'The Skeleton in Armor' or the novels of George Martin, are familiar but many are not; I at least did not know of the seventeenth-century Dane Thomas Barthol, who wrote three books in Latin about the character of his historical forebearers. Some titles and individuals figure prominently throughout: Richard Wagner, Neil Gaiman, and Game of Thrones, for example. Other modern scholars and popularizers have written about the transformation of Norse materials into contemporary stories, but I know of no other book that has the range this one does. Larrington thus provides a kind of compendium of Norse riffs and thereby a shortcut into primary materials for anyone interested in pursuing the topics further.

Perhaps for a general book directed at a general audience, it would be inappropriate for The Norse Myths to engage fully with the continued political and social ramifications of the appropriation of the Norse material. Not only in the past two centuries but since the early modern period, when English historiographers in a sense discovered [End Page 71] the Norse past, Óðinn and the Viking temperament have played crucial roles in the formation of ethnicity and cultural identity. Someone like William Morris might seem a long way from Richard Wagner, but they shared the notion that the Viking past could be remade in ways to justify an often exclusionary present. These are the same approaches that lead to thinking that is implicitly white supremacist already in the nineteenth century and explicitly so in the past...

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来源期刊
Arthuriana
Arthuriana Multiple-
CiteScore
0.30
自引率
0.00%
发文量
24
期刊介绍: Arthuriana publishes peer-reviewed, on-line analytical and bibliographical surveys of various Arthurian subjects. You can access these e-resources through this site. The review and evaluation processes for e-articles is identical to that for the print journal . Once accepted for publication, our surveys are supported and maintained by Professor Alan Lupack at the University of Rochester through the Camelot Project.
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