From Rus’ to Rímur, volume 65 in the Islandica series and simultaneously an issue in the occasional journal New Norse Studies, offers six contributions that range across Europe from East to West and across three categories: ‘Historical Studies, ‘ ‘Literary Studies, ‘ and ‘New Editions.’ The volume opens with a historical-onomastic study of the Varangian presence in Medieval Rus’ and proceeds to the Isle of Man for a consideration of its population’s ‘ethnogenesis’ in the tenth and eleventh centuries. Literary studies and fresh translations follow to return our attention to the remarkable creativity in sagas and poetry that was an especially rich province of Norse and Icelandic culture.
Contributors: Matthew Bardowell, Brynja orgeirsdóttir, Francesco Colombo, Caitlin Ellis, Eric A. Haley-Halinski, Shaun F. D. Hughes, Jonathan Y. H. Hui, Philip Lavender, Anna Litvina, James Mc Intosh, Dirk H. Steinforth, Fjodor Uspenski.
Tabla de materias
Introduction
1. The Destinies of Varangians in Eleventh- to 17 Twelfth-Century Rus’: Yakun ‘the Blind, ‘ S(h)imon, and his Son George
2. ‘From that Union came the Manx people’: Ethnogenesis in the Isle of Man in the Tenth and Eleventh Centuries
3. ‘A Never-Ending Story’: History, Saga, and Secondary Creation
4. The Aesthetics of Concealment and Revelation in the Skaldic Poetry of Kári Sölmundarson
5. Jóns saga leiksveins: A Text and Translation
6. Depicting Friendship in Early Modern Iceland: Apellis ríma by Eiríkur Hallsson.
Sobre el autor
Shaun F. D. Hughes is Professor of English in the College of Liberal Arts, Purdue University. He has researched in and written extensively on Old Norse/Icelandic and Early Modern Icelandic literature and culture. Allyn K. Pearson is a doctoral student in the Literary, Theory, and Cultural Studies Program and the English Department at Purdue University.