Affiliation:
1. University of Oxford Linacre College and Faculty of English, , UK
2. University of Copenhagen Dictionary of Old Norse Prose, , Denmark
Abstract
Abstract
This study applies statistical approaches to the analysis of the genre relationships of Old Norse-Icelandic literature in order to expand our understanding of the relationships between works, their transmission, and their possible modes of reception, as manifested in the extant manuscripts. This article contributes to the ongoing discussion of the genre boundaries of Old Norse-Icelandic literature and presents an alternative method of engaging with this material in the form of computer-assisted analysis, i.e. data visualization and network analysis. Using data collected from major online databases of Old Norse-Icelandic manuscripts, we present the most complete to date network of co-occurrences in manuscripts of works belonging to a number of literary genres. The present study empirically demonstrates the manifoldness of the connections between the Old Norse-Icelandic works which transcend traditional scholarly genre boundaries. The study identifies two main communities within the network: a community of romances, or works of narrative fiction, which includes mainly legendary sagas (fornaldarsögur) and chivalric sagas (riddarasögur), and a community of historicizing narratives, or pseudo-history, which includes mainly sagas of Icelanders (Íslendingasögur) and kings’ sagas (konungasögur).
Publisher
Oxford University Press (OUP)
Subject
Computer Science Applications,Linguistics and Language,Language and Linguistics,Information Systems
Reference56 articles.
1. Splitting the saga;Andersson;Scandinavian Studies,1975
2. Generic hybrids: Norwegian family sagas and Icelandic mythic-heroic sagas;Ashman Rowe;Scandinavian Studies,1993
3. Þorsteins þáttr uxafóts, Helga þáttr Þórissonar, and the Conversion þættir;Ashman Rowe;Scandinavian Studies,2004
4. A Critical Companion to Old Norse Literary Genre