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Bestseller
BestsellerE-book
Author Price, Neil S., author.

Title The Viking way : magic and mind in Late Iron Age Scandinavia / Neil Price.

Publication Info. Oxford : Oxbow Books 2019.

Item Status

Edition Seond edition, fully revised and expanded.
Description 1 online resource (xxx, 398 pages) : illustrations
Physical Medium polychrome
Description text file
Bibliography Includes bibliographical references and index.
Summary Magic, sorcery and witchcraft are among the most common themes of the great medieval Icelandic sagas and poems, the problematic yet vital sources that provide our primary textual evidence for the Viking Age that they claim to describe. Yet despite the consistency of this picture, surprisingly little archaeological or historical research has been done to explore what this may really have meant to the men and women of the time. This book examines the evidence for Old Norse sorcery, looking at its meaning and function, practice and practitioners, and the complicated constructions of gender and sexual identity with which these were underpinned. Combining strong elements of eroticism and aggression, sorcery appears as a fundamental domain of women's power, linking them with the gods, the dead and the future. Their battle spells and combat rituals complement the men's physical acts of fighting, in a supernatural empowerment of the Viking way of life. What emerges is a fundamentally new image of the world in which the Vikings understood themselves to move, in which magic and its implications permeated every aspect of a society permanently geared for war.
Contents 1. Different Vikings? Towards a cognitive archaeology of the later Iron Age -- A beginning at Birka -- Textual archaeology and the Iron Age -- Vikings in (pre)history -- Materiality of text -- Annaliste archaeology and a historical anthropology of the Vikings -- Other and the Odd? -- Conflict in the archaeology of cognition -- Others without Othering -- Indigenous archaeologies and the Vikings -- An archaeology of the Viking mind? -- 2. Problems and paradigms in the study of Old Norse sorcery -- Entering the mythology -- Research perspectives on Scandinavian pre-Christian religion -- Philology and comparative theology -- Gods and monsters, worship and superstition -- Religion and belief -- Invisible population -- Shape of Old Norse religion -- Double world: seior and the problem of Old Norse `magic' -- Other magics: galdr, gandr and `Ooinnic sorcery -- Seior in the sources -- Skaldic poetry -- Eddie poetry -- Sagas of the kings -- Sagas of Icelanders (the `family sagas') -- Fornaldarsogur (`sagas of ancient times', `legendary sagas') -- Biskupasogur (`Bishops' sagas') -- Early medieval Scandinavian law codes -- Non-Scandinavian sources -- Seior in research -- 3. Seior -- Ooinn -- Ooinn the sorcerer -- Ooinn's names -- Freyja and the magic of the Vanir -- Seior and Old Norse cosmology -- Performers -- Witches, seeresses and wise women -- Women and the witch-ride -- Men and magic -- Assistants -- Towards a terminology of Nordic sorcerers -- Performers in death? -- Performance -- Ritual architecture and space -- Clothing of sorcery -- Masks, veils and head-coverings -- Drums, tub-lids and shields -- Staffs and wands -- Staffs from archaeological contexts -- Narcotics and intoxicants -- Charms -- Songs and chants. -- Problem of trance and ecstasy -- Engendering seior -- Ergi, nio and witchcraft -- Sexual performance and eroticism in seior -- Seior and the concept of the soul -- Helping spirits in seior -- Domestic sphere of seior -- Divination and revealing the hidden -- Hunting and weather magic -- Role of the healer -- Seior contextualised -- 4. Noaidevuohta -- Seior and the Sami -- Sami-Norse relations in the Viking Age -- Sami religion and the Drum-Time -- World of the gods -- Spirits and Rulers in the Sami cognitive landscape -- Names, souls and sacrifice -- Noaidevuohta and the noaidi -- Rydving's terminology of noaidevuohta -- Specialist noaidi -- Diviners, sorcerers and other magic-workers -- Sights and sounds of trance -- `Invisible power' and secret sorcery -- Women and noaidevuohta -- Sources for female sorcery -- Assistants and jojker-choirs -- Women, ritual and drum magic. -- Female diviners and healers in Sami society -- Animals and the natural world -- Female noaidi? -- Rituals of noaidevuohta -- Role of jojk -- Material culture of noaidevuohta -- An early medieval noaidi? The man from Vivallen -- Sexuality and eroticism in noaidevuohta -- Offence and defence in noaidevuohta -- Functions of noaidevuohta -- Ethnicity of religious context in Viking-Age Scandinavia -- 5. Circumpolar religion and the question of Old Norse shamanism -- Circumpolar cultures and the invention of shamanism -- Shamanic encounter -- Early ethnographies: shamanic research in Russia and beyond -- Shamanism in anthropological perspective -- Shamanic world-view -- World Pillar: shamanism and circumpolar cosmology -- Ensouled world -- Shamanic vocation -- Gender and sexual identity -- Eroticism and sexual performance -- Aggressive sorcery for offence and defence. -- Shamanism in Scandinavia -- From the art of the hunters to the age of bronze -- Seior before the Vikings? -- Landscapes of the mind -- Eight-legged horse -- Tricksters and trickery -- Seior and circumpolar shamanism -- Two analogies on the functions of the seior-staff -- Shamanic motivation -- Towards a shamanic world-view of the Viking Age -- 6. Supernatural empowerment of aggression -- Seior and the world of war -- Valkyrjur, skaldmeyjar and hjalmvitr -- Female warriors in reality -- Valkyrjur in context -- Names of the valkyrjur -- Valkyrjur in battle-kennings -- Supernatural agency in battle -- Beings of destruction -- Ooinn and the Wild Hunt -- Projection of destruction -- Battle magic -- Sorcery for warriors -- Sorcery for sorcerers -- Seior and battlefield resurrection -- Seior and the shifting of shape -- Berserkir and ulfheonar -- Battlefield of animals. -- Ritual disguise and shamanic armies -- Ecstasy, psychic dislocation and the dynamics of mass violence -- Homeric lyssa and holy rage -- Predators and prey in the legitimate war -- Weaving war, grinding battle: Darraoarljoo and Grottasongr in context -- The `weapon dancers' -- 7. Viking way -- A reality in stories -- Invisible battlefield -- Material magic -- Viking women, Viking men -- 8. Magic and mind -- Receptions and reactions -- Cracks in the ice of Norse `religion' -- Walking into the seior: contested interpretations of Viking-Age magic -- Questioning Norse `shamanism' -- Staffs and spinning -- Queering magic? -- Social world of war -- Viking mind: a conclusion -- Primary sources, including translations -- Pre-nineteenth-century sources for the early Sami and Siberian cultures -- Secondary works -- Sources in archive.
Local Note eBooks on EBSCOhost EBSCO eBook Subscription Academic Collection - North America
Subject Vikings.
Vikings.
Vikings -- Religion.
Vikings -- Religion.
Vikings -- Warfare.
Vikings -- Warfare.
Viking antiquities -- Scandinavia.
Viking antiquities.
Scandinavia.
Iron age -- Scandinavia.
Iron age.
Excavations (Archaeology) -- Scandinavia.
Excavations (Archaeology)
Genre/Form Electronic books.
ISBN 9781785708022 (electronic book)
1785708023 (electronic book)
9781785708046 (electronic book)
178570804X (electronic book)
9781842172605
1842172603