Il laccio di scarpa di Skarpheðinn, la scena-tipo, e la tipologia cristiana

Joseph Harris has described Njáls saga as «perhaps the supreme artistic realization of the idea of Northern history as turning on the conversion and of the implications of this idea in the lives of individuals». The current paper attempts to show precisely how this general assertion - made at the ma...

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Bibliographic Details
Subtitles:Skarpheðinn of the shoelace, the scene-type and the Christian type
Main Author: Turco, Jeffrey (Author)
Format: Electronic Article
Language:Italian
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Published: Morcelliana 2015
In: Studi e materiali di storia delle religioni
Year: 2015, Volume: 81, Issue: 2, Pages: 414-439
Further subjects:B Íslendingasögur
B Shoelaces
B Cristianesimo
B Njáls saga
B Narrativa
B Christianity
B Harris, Joseph
B Saga di Njáll
B Typology (Theology)
B tipologia
B Narratives
B Sagas
B Narrative
B Typology
B saghe islandesi
Parallel Edition:Non-electronic
Description
Summary:Joseph Harris has described Njáls saga as «perhaps the supreme artistic realization of the idea of Northern history as turning on the conversion and of the implications of this idea in the lives of individuals». The current paper attempts to show precisely how this general assertion - made at the macro-level of medieval Christian Geschichtsschreibung - plays out at the micro-level of saga narrative. To illustrate one such instance, I begin with the seemingly pedestrian observation that there are exactly three instances of shoelace-tying in Njáls saga. The first takes place when the Irish slave Melkólfr returns from his cheese-stealing expedition on Hallgerðr's behalf. The second takes place when Skarpheðinn pauses to tie his shoe before gliding across the ice to kill his enemy Þráinn. Thirdly and lastly, Þorsteinn Hallsson stops to leisurely tie his shoe while his fellows are being being mown down after the battle of Clontarf and is spared by Kerþjálfaðr. I argue that what at first seems like an inconsequential detail (or at most an irreducible example of the author's flair for the enigmatic) in fact belongs to a scheme of typological patterning that, in Njáls saga, is best understood as a hybrid-product of indiginous narrative and continental historiographic traditions. (English)
ISSN:2611-8742
Contains:Enthalten in: Studi e materiali di storia delle religioni