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    Anger in the Sagas of Icelanders

    Anger in the Sagas of Icelanders by Manning, George C.;

    Series: Oxford English Monographs;

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    Product details:

    • Publisher OUP Oxford
    • Date of Publication 31 July 2025

    • ISBN 9780198970620
    • Binding Hardback
    • No. of pages256 pages
    • Size 240x160x22 mm
    • Weight 536 g
    • Language English
    • 616

    Categories

    Short description:

    Manning examines the presentation of anger in the Íslendingasögur ('Sagas of Icelanders') and Íslendingaþættir ('Tales of Icelanders'), a remarkable Old Norse-Icelandic corpus of texts written in the thirteenth and fourteenth centuries, that details conflicts and feuds of Icelanders from the late-ninth to early-eleventh centuries.

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    Long description:

    George C. Manning examines the presentation of anger in the Íslendingasögur ('Sagas of Icelanders') and associated Íslendingaþættir ('Tales of Icelanders'), a remarkable Old Norse-Icelandic corpus of texts written down in the thirteenth and fourteenth centuries that detail conflicts and feuds of Icelanders during the late-ninth, tenth, and early-eleventh centuries. It first shows how various unqualified involuntary somatic responses, facial expressions, and bodily movements frequently indicate angry experience in the sagas, before arguing that anger's mode of expression is contingent on a character's sociocultural identity. Through close analysis of how five groups of characters--men, women, elderly men, berserkir (raging warriors), and sovereign figures--exhibit anger, the book demonstrates that these different character groups experience and express emotion in different ways, in accordance with strict social rules: they adhere to different 'emotive scripts', to use Sif Ríkharðsdóttir's term. Importantly, the book shows, through analysis of how these identities experience anger, that emotions institute and uphold gender configurations; its primary focus, therefore, is the nexus between anger and gender.

    Manning argues that anger is seen as a weakness for most male characters, while female characters, elderly men, berserkir, and sovereign figures can exhibit anger without opprobrium and often use it to their advantage. It demonstrates how anger plays a key role in establishing (or resolving) narrative tensions in the sagas and deepens our understanding of the Old Norse-Icelandic terms that saga-authors use to communicate anger. The work--the first book-length investigation of anger in the Sagas of Icelanders--thus functions as a major intervention into the fields of both emotion and gender studies in medieval literature.

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    Table of Contents:

    Introduction
    Part I. 'Ferreting Out' Anger
    'Ferreting Out' Anger from Involuntary Psychosomatic Indicia
    'Ferreting Out' Anger from Facial and Bodily Expressions
    Part II. Anger and Masculinities
    Anger and Hegemonic Masculinity
    Anger and Female Masculinity
    Part III. Anger and Other Identities
    Anger and Old Age
    Anger and Berserkir
    Anger and Sovereignty
    Conclusion

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