ABSTRACT

First Published in 1995. This book focuses on the role and significance of texts and textualism for anthropology and ethnography and, more specifically, the understanding of particular aspects of Icelandic society and history. The discussion is centred on a range of issues; moving between general social theory and ethnographic details, the immediate present and the distant past, language and production, fieldwork and the act of writing, texts (sagas, novels, and ethnographies) and real life. In each case, however, it draws attention to what may be called a pragmatist approach, a concern with action and agency as they constitute, and are constituted by, social life. Such an approach, I hold, is an important and timely remedy to current textualism, the trendy theoretical tradition often described as the linguistic turn.

chapter One|24 pages

Introduction

part One|48 pages

From Life to Text

part Two|48 pages

Times, Lives and Medieval Texts

chapter Four|24 pages

Sagas, history, and social life

part Three|59 pages

Lives, Texts and Modern Realities

chapter Seven|23 pages

Beyond environmental Orientalism