ABSTRACT

Bringing alive the dramatic poems of Old Norse heroic legend, this new collection offers accessible, ground-breaking and inspiring essays which introduce and analyse the exciting legends of the two doomed Helgis and their valkyrie lovers; the dragon-slayer Sigurðr; Brynhildr the implacable shield-maiden; tragic Guðrún and her children; Attila the Hun (from a Norse perspective!); and greedy King Fróði, whose name lives on in Tolkien’s Frodo. The book provides a comprehensive introduction to the poems for students, taking a number of fresh, theoretically-sophisticated and productive approaches to the poetry and its characters. Contributors bring to bear insights generated by comparative study, speech act and feminist theory, queer theory and psychoanalytic theory (among others) to raise new, probing questions about the heroic poetry and its reception.

Each essay is accompanied by up-to-date lists of further reading and a contextualisation of the poems or texts discussed in critical history. Drawing on the latest international studies of the poems in their manuscript context, and written by experts in their individual fields, engaging with the texts in their original language and context, but presented with full translations, this companion volume to The Poetic Edda: Essays on Old Norse Mythology (Routledge, 2002) is accessible to students and illuminating for experts. Essays also examine the afterlife of the heroic poems in Norse legendary saga, late medieval Icelandic poetry, the nineteenth-century operas of Richard Wagner’s Der Ring des Nibelungen, and the recently published (posthumous) poem by Tolkien, The Legend of Sigurd and Gudrún.

 

chapter |7 pages

Introduction

Revisiting the Poetic Edda

chapter |3 pages

Introduction to Chapter 1

The Helgi Poems

chapter |21 pages

Sigurðr, a Medieval Hero

A Manuscript-Based Interpretation of the “Young Sigurðr Poems”

chapter |5 pages

Introduction to Chapters 4, 5 and 6

Elegy in Eddic Poetry

chapter |26 pages

Elegy in Eddic Poetry

Its Origin and Context

chapter |10 pages

Guðrúnarkviða in fyrsta

Guðrún's Healing Tears

chapter |19 pages

“Gerðit Hon … sem konor aðrar”

Women and Subversion in Eddic Heroic Poetry

chapter |4 pages

Introduction to Chapter 7

The Later Heroic Poems of the Edda

chapter |17 pages

“I Have Long Desired to Cure You of Old Age”

Sibling Drama in the Later Heroic Poems of the Edda

chapter |2 pages

Introduction to Chapter 8

Grottasöngr (The Song of Grotti)

chapter |24 pages

Mythological Motivation in Eddic Heroic Poetry

Interpreting Grottasöngr

chapter |19 pages

The Eddica minora

A Lesser Poetic Edda?

chapter |19 pages

Wagner, Morris, and the Sigurd Figure

Confronting Freedom and Uncertainty

chapter |20 pages

Writing into the Gap

Tolkien's Reconstruction of the Legends of Sigurd and Gudrún