Violence and Risk in Medieval Iceland: This Spattered Isle
 
Product details:

ISBN13:9780198866046
ISBN10:0198866046
Binding:Hardback
No. of pages:374 pages
Size:241x161x27 mm
Weight:1 g
Language:English
292
Category:

Violence and Risk in Medieval Iceland

This Spattered Isle
 
Publisher: OUP Oxford
Date of Publication:
 
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Short description:

This book investigates the history of violence in medieval Iceland, testing theoretical tools by applying them to a series of case studies drawn from the Icelandic sagas.

Long description:
Historians spend a lot of time thinking about violence: bloodshed and feats of heroism punctuate practically every narration of the past. Yet historians have been slow to subject 'violence' itself to conceptual analysis. What aspects of the past do we designate violent? To what methodological assumptions do we commit ourselves when we employ this term? How may we approach the category 'violence' in a specifically historical way, and what is it that we explain when we write its history? Astonishingly, such questions are seldom even voiced, much less debated, in the historical literature.

Violence and Risk in Medieval Iceland: This Spattered Isle lays out a cultural history model for understanding violence. Using interdisciplinary tools, it argues that violence is a positively constructed asset, deployed along three principal axes - power, signification, and risk. Analysing violence in instrumental terms, as an attempt to coerce others, focuses on power. Analysing it in symbolic terms, as an attempt to communicate meanings, focuses on signification. Finally, analysing it in cognitive terms, as an attempt to exercise agency despite imperfect control over circumstances, focuses on risk.

Violence and Risk in Medieval Iceland explores a place and time notorious for its rampant violence. Iceland's famous sagas hold treasure troves of circumstantial data, ideally suited for past-tense ethnography, yet demand that the reader come up with subtle and innovative methodologies for recovering histories from their stories. The sagas throw into sharp relief the kinds of analytic insights we obtain through cultural interpretation, offering lessons that apply to other epochs too.

This is a sophisticated and thought provoking book.
Table of Contents:
Preface
Introduction
What does violence have to do with history?
Chronicling a blood-spattered isle
The blood in the feud
Killing ambition
Violence, naturally
Epilogue: Violence as a cultural system
Appendix: History from a story, a structural approach to saga textuality