Description
Book SynopsisIn this book, Theodore M. Andersson, a leading scholar of the Norse sagas, introduces readers to the development of the Icelandic sagas between 1180 and 1280, a crucial period that witnessed a gradual shift of emphasis from tales of adventure and personal distinction to the analysis of political and historical propositions. Beginning with the first full-length sagas and culminating in the acknowledged masterpiece Njáls saga, Andersson emphasizes a historical perspective, establishing a chronology for seventeen of the most important sagas and showing how they evolve thematically and stylistically over the century under study.
Revisiting the long-standing debate about the oral and literary components of the sagas, Andersson argues that there is a clear progression from the somewhat mechanical gathering of oral lore in the early sagas to an increasingly tight and authorially controlled composition in the later sagas. The early sagasincluding The Legendary Saga of Saint
Trade Review
The Growth of the Medieval Icelandic Sagas (1180–1280) is both useful and thought-provoking throughout. Andersson's style is succinct and engaging. He introduces a number of basic concepts, which are clearly and useful explained, while still finding room for some striking, original, and challenging arguments.
* Saga-Book *
The very fact that one is drawn to engage with Andersson's saga criticism is a great strength of this book—there has never been enough committed, opinionated (in the most positive sense), intelligent, informed, and personal close reading of saga text. It is easily the best account to date of the origins of saga narrative.
* Modern Language Review *
Theodore M. Andersson has a fair claim to being the most important North American voice in saga scholarship, and this book is a stimulating, thoroughly informed, insightful, and thoughtful account of a representative set of sagas.
* Journal of English and Germanic Philology *