ABSTRACT

Emotional Experience and Microhistory explores the life and death of Magnús Hj. Magnússon through his diary, poetry and other writing, showing how best to use the methods of microhistory to address complicated historical situations.

The book deals with the many faces of microhistory and applies it’s methodology to the life of the Icelandic destitute pauper poet Magnús Hj. Magnússon (1873–1916). Having left his foster home at the age of 19 in 1892, he lived a peripatetic existence in an unstinting struggle with poor health, together with a ceaseless quest for a space to pursue writing and scholarship in accord with his dreams. He produced and accumulated a huge quantity of sources (autobiography, diary, poems, reflections) which are termed by the author as ‘egodocuments’. The book demonstrates how these egodocuments can be applied systematically, revealing unexpected perspectives on his life and demonstrating how integration of diverse sources can open up new perspectives on complex and difficult subjects. In so doing, the author offers an understanding both of how Magnússon’s story has been told, and how it can give insight into such matters as gender relations and sexual life, and the history of emotions.

Highlighting how the historiographical development of modern scholarship has shaped scholars’ ideas about egodocuments and microhistory around the world, the book is of great use and interest to scholars of microhistory, social and cultural modern history, literary theory, anthropology and ethnology.

part I|34 pages

The normal exception and stories from the people

chapter 1|11 pages

Creating a story

chapter 2|6 pages

Real people and fictional ones

chapter 3|7 pages

The individual and microhistory

chapter 4|3 pages

The normal exception

chapter 5|5 pages

The book

part II|80 pages

Emotional communities in the life and death of Magnús Hj. Magnússon

chapter 1|3 pages

In hostile waters

chapter 2|11 pages

A harsh life on the farm of Hestur

chapter 3|10 pages

Courtship

chapter 4|3 pages

Matters of life and death

chapter 5|6 pages

Matthildur’s death and the poets

chapter 6|10 pages

Saved by the Salvation Army?

chapter 7|12 pages

Rape: wrongful ruling?

chapter 8|4 pages

The High Court

chapter 9|7 pages

Two contrasting arguments: new sources

chapter 10|8 pages

Days of hope and fear

chapter 11|4 pages

Eternal life

part III|33 pages

In the company of few

chapter 1|5 pages

A pointillist portrait of a person

chapter 3|7 pages

Microhistory, material culture and death

chapter 4|8 pages

Fiction and microhistory