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The Vikings and the Victorians: Inventing…
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The Vikings and the Victorians: Inventing the Old North in Nineteenth-Century Britain (original 2000; edition 2002)

by Andrew Wawn

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341713,628 (4.5)None
This is the first book-length treatment of the Victorians' fascination with the old north. It explores the ways in which the terms 'Viking' and 'Viking Age', both unknown in 1800, were invented, explored and popularised during the nineteenth century. The material examined - published and unpublished - includes novels, poems, plays, lectures, reviews, secondary school textbooks, saga-stead travelogues, private correspondence, art and music, as well as dictionaries, grammars and scholarly editions of eddas and sagas. In the cast of characters Sir Walter Scott, William Morris, Edward Elgar and Rudyard Kipling appear alongside long-forgotten amateur enthusiasts from Lerwick to the Isle of Wight. We follow the pursuit of Viking-related archaeology, dialectology, folklore, philology, runology and mythology. We see the old north used to legitimise many concepts and causes - from buccaneering mercantilism and imperial expansion to jury trial and women's rights. In drawing this wide range of materials together, Andrew Wawn presents a comprehensive and colourful account of the construction and translation of the Viking Age in Queen Victoria's Britain.ANDREW WAWN is Professor of Anglo-Icelandic Studies at the University of Leeds.… (more)
Member:esther_a
Title:The Vikings and the Victorians: Inventing the Old North in Nineteenth-Century Britain
Authors:Andrew Wawn
Info:D.S.Brewer (2002), Paperback, 434 pages
Collections:Your library, Nonfiction
Rating:
Tags:history, Scandinavia, Medieval, 19th, England

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The Vikings and the Victorians: Inventing the Old North in Victorian Britain by Andrew Wawn (2000)

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Not so much a history of vikings, as a history of how they were perceived from the 18th century to the mid-20th. Dense with information about early geographers in Iceland, theatre productions of the sagas (performed in fashionable powdered wigs) to the vagaries of translators and the rise and fall in popularity of this story over that.. this is glorious stuff, albeit aimed at a slightly niche market.

There are some very funny parts; I remember showing a Swedish colleague the passage by an early victorian traveller in the Baltic, explaining how the accent of Swedes developed the way it did because they didn't want to open their lips too far and let frigid winds into their mouths - she wasn't impressed. ( )
  nessreader | Aug 29, 2008 |
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This is the first book-length treatment of the Victorians' fascination with the old north. It explores the ways in which the terms 'Viking' and 'Viking Age', both unknown in 1800, were invented, explored and popularised during the nineteenth century. The material examined - published and unpublished - includes novels, poems, plays, lectures, reviews, secondary school textbooks, saga-stead travelogues, private correspondence, art and music, as well as dictionaries, grammars and scholarly editions of eddas and sagas. In the cast of characters Sir Walter Scott, William Morris, Edward Elgar and Rudyard Kipling appear alongside long-forgotten amateur enthusiasts from Lerwick to the Isle of Wight. We follow the pursuit of Viking-related archaeology, dialectology, folklore, philology, runology and mythology. We see the old north used to legitimise many concepts and causes - from buccaneering mercantilism and imperial expansion to jury trial and women's rights. In drawing this wide range of materials together, Andrew Wawn presents a comprehensive and colourful account of the construction and translation of the Viking Age in Queen Victoria's Britain.ANDREW WAWN is Professor of Anglo-Icelandic Studies at the University of Leeds.

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