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Research Group for Medieval Philology
Workshop

Mythology as a Branch of Learning in Medieval Scandinavia

International workshop organised in cooperation by UC Berkeley and University of Bergen funded by the Peder Sather Center (UC Berkeley).

Snorra-Edda
脥B 299 4to, 58r in the National Library of Iceland, Reykjav铆k
Photo:
Landsb贸kasafn 脥slands

Main content

Our workshop is part of a collaborative project between the Old Norse milieus at UC Berkeley and the University of Bergen, funded by the . With this project, we want to further the understanding of the Scandinavian mythological materials seen as a branch of medieval learning. We seek to do this by exploring the intellectual and institutional frameworks within which the mythology was discussed, transmitted and not least recreated in a form that was palatable from a medieval Christian perspective. We have chosen to approach the materials from three different angles:听

  • How is mythological knowledge organized?听
  • What conceptual framework is applied to the material?听
  • And how is real-world technology mirrored in myth?听

By bringing together senior and junior scholars from our two universities in听two workshops (one in Bergen and one听in Berkeley), the project continues the cooperation between our two universities that was initiated with the likewise Peder Sather-funded project听Knowledge听of the North: Traditions, Transformations, and Practices of Medieval Scandinavian Learning听in 2013鈥2014.听

Within the corpus of medieval Scandinavian mythological texts, we focus on three interdependent topic areas:

1)听Writing myth 鈥 creating mythology:听The organization of mythological learning in medieval Scandinavia

The听Prose Edda听codifies myths and mythic factoids within a larger textual framework. The first focal area of the project has two aims: 1) it will on the one hand examine the characteristics of this mythology by comparing it with the sources of the mythographer (to the extent they are preserved) as well as the works of other mythographers of the classical and medieval period. Particular attention will be given to the ways in which the cosmology, the mythic history and the divine hierarchy is formed in the text. 2) It will examine the aims of the mythographers in order to situate the medieval mythographic texts on a scale between the grammatical/hermeneutic where the aim is to interpret existing materials and the rhetorical where the aim is the creation of new materials.

2) Euhemerism: Between Myth and History

The concept of euhemerism was widely popularized by classics of the study of mythology like Georges Dum茅zil 鈥 however the toolbox of theories and approaches has changed since his time, as well as general availability of even marginal sources, and thus allows for novel insights. We would like to answer questions such as: what types of mythic narrative patterns and motifs end up being turned to (pseudo)history? What function do they serve in the historiographic texts? Are there any specific historical motivations and conditions for this transformation? Is it a one-way process, two-way process or some other type of relationship (both in specific cases and in general)?听

3)听Tales of Tools: Myth and Technology

We intend to investigate the technological thought in Early and High Medieval mythography from Scandinavia and Iceland. Our focus will be on the representation and reflection of technology in Old Norse myth and the transformation and adaptation of these narratives within learned medieval culture. The latter, informed both by classical and contemporary Latin sources, integrates Old Norse technology myth as part of a mythology of the past into contemporary functions and uses.

Programme听

Monday 11 November

9:00 鈥 9:15听听听听听Meeting up

9:15 鈥撎9:30听听听听听Welcome

Session听I:听Writing Myth听

9:30 鈥 10:20听听听听听Jonas Wellendorf (UC Berkeley):听Theomachy in Medieval Scandinavian Literature

10:30 鈥撎11:20听听听Jacob Malone (UC Berkeley):听Framing the Cognitive Machine: Material Schematics,听Sj贸nhverfingar, and Semantic Interfaces in 鈥楪ylfaginning

Lunch break

Session II:听Creating Mythology

13:00 鈥 13:50听听Kate Heslop听(UC Berkeley):听Seeing Things: Towards an Old Norse Poetics of Visuality

14:00 鈥撎14:50听听Ben Allport (Bergen):听Origo regionum: An Exploration of Learned Impulses and Regional Perspectives in the 鈥楩undinn N贸regr鈥橭rigin Myth

15:00 鈥撎15:50听听Isobel Boles (UC Berkeley):听Crafting the Past: Shaping Landscapes and Selecting Memory in 鈥楥hronicon Lethrense鈥

Tuesday 12 November

Session III:听Euhemerism听Between Myth and History

9:00 鈥 9:50听听听听听听Jan A. Koz谩k (Bergen):听Transformations of the Myth of 脼贸rr鈥檚 Visit to Geirr谦冒r after the Christianization

10:00 鈥 10:50听听Rue Taylor (UC Berkeley): Far-Travelers and Euhemerized Gods: The East in Myth and Legend

11:00 鈥撎11:50听听Patrick Farrugia (Bergen):听Just which Trojans went to Thule?听

Lunch break

Session IV:听Things and Tools

13:00 鈥 13:50听听Jens Eike Schnall (Bergen):听Tales of Tools: the听protos heuretes听in Old Norse Technology Myth听

14:00 鈥撎14:50听听Timothy Liam Waters (UC Berkeley):听Materiality and Mythology: An Application of Thing Theory in the Eddic Corpus

15:00 鈥撎15:50听听Zuzana Stankovitsov谩 (Bergen): A Myth about Milling between Poetry and Prose

16:00 鈥 16:45听听Concluding Discussion听