Episodes
-
In this episode, Dr. Felix Lummer, lecturer at the University of Iceland, briefly discusses scholarly knowledge of Germanic beliefs before the Viking Age. DISCLAIMER: THERE ARE IMAGES OF DECEASED PEOPLE IN THIS VIDEO.Dr. Lummer received his PhD from the University of Iceland, School of Social Sciences. His dissertation is titled "Lost in Translation: Adapting Supernatural Concepts from Old French Chivalric Literature into the Old Norse riddarasögur."Notable publications:Lummer, Felix. "The Translation of Magic in the Translatedriddarasǫgur," Medium Ævum, 91(2) (2022): 201-235.Lummer, Felix. "'ek hræðumz ekki þik' – The dvergar in Translatedriddarasǫgur," European Journal of Scandinavian Studies,51(2) (2021b): 335-355. https://doi.org/10.1515/ejss-2020-2022.For more, please see his Academia.edu page:https://independent.academia.edu/FelixLummer
-
In this episode, Dr. Jackson Crawford and I discuss color terms in Old West Norse. He did his dissertation on this subject, and it is publicly available here:https://scholar.colorado.edu/concern/graduate_thesis_or_dissertations/5m60qr961
Please check out his YouTube channel as well as his translations of the Poetic Edda and other Old Norse poetry and literature.
www.jacksonwcrawford.com
-
Missing episodes?
-
The second episode in the series about the Prose Edda. In it, we take a quick look at Gylfaginning, or "The Beguiling of Gylfi." For reference, please look at the sources below:
+ Edda, Snorri Sturluson (Anthony Faulks - Editor/Translator)
+ Altuna Stone, U1161, Sweden
reach out at [email protected]
-
The first episode in the series about the Prose Edda. We discuss Snorri's life including his upbringing, politics, and the legacy he left behind. Please check out the following sources which went into today's episode, as well as a few that I think would be useful to your studies!
+ Gísli Sigurðsson. “Snorri Sturluson and the Best of Both Worlds.” Essay. In Snorri Sturluson and Reykjaholt: The Author and the Magnate, His Life, Works and Environment at Reykjaholt in Iceland, edited by Helgi þorlákkson and Gudrun Sveinbjarnardottir, 291–317. Copenhagen: Museum Tusculanum Press, 2018.
+ Sturlunga Saga - English Translation by Julia H. McGrew 1970
+ Króksfjarðarbók, AM 122 a fol, c.1350-1370, ed. Kr. Kalund, Det Kongelige Nordiske Oldskrift-Selskab Kobenhavn og Kristiania: 1906 - 11
+ Snorri Sturluson and the Edda: The Conversion of Cultural Capital in Medieval Scandinavia by Kevin J. Wanner, 2008
+ Edda, Anthony Faulks (translator)
+ www.snorrastofa.is
-
Welcome to Myths of Midgard. In this introductory episode, I tell you a bit about my background and my intentions behind the podcast.