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Vestlandet – A Place of Cultural Encounter European Journal of Scandinavian Studies Pub Date : 2024-02-19 Leonie Krutzinna, Maike Schmidt, Morten Øveraas
This article focuses on Norwegian–German cultural contacts in Western Norway in the first half of the 20th century. Although rural Western Norway has always been difficult to access, numerous cultural interrelations between German- and Norwegian-speaking artists, writers, and philosophers can be observed. These encounters can be characterised as real exchanges from person to person, but also as exchanges
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The (Vi)Kings’ Saga: Mixed Modality as the Key to the Construction of Meaning in Jómsvíkinga saga European Journal of Scandinavian Studies Pub Date : 2024-02-19 Lucie Korecká
The objective of this article is to analyse the narrative functions of mixed modality in Jómsvíkinga saga, a text that combines elements of different saga genres, primarily the kings’ sagas and the legendary sagas. It is argued here that the mixed modality is not a sign of the early saga’s imperfection, but it serves as a narrative device that contributes to the saga’s capacity to indirectly express
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Häuser am Hardangerfjord als Orte deutsch-norwegischer Kulturkontakte: Bertha Rohlsen, Karl Schmidt-Rottluff und Bess Mensendieck in Lofthus European Journal of Scandinavian Studies Pub Date : 2024-02-19 Carolin Vogel
Due to its impressive nature and culture, the Hardanger region was a well-known and popular destination for Germans at the beginning of the 20th century. In the small village of Lofthus, art collector Bertha Rohlsen and gymnastics pioneer Bess Mensendieck even moved into their own summer homes. The expressionist painter Karl Schmidt-Rottluff was also a guest there and created images of the North that
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Das ,Ich‘, das ,Sie‘ und das ,Du‘ in Ernst Jüngers norwegischen Reisetagebuch Myrdun (1943) European Journal of Scandinavian Studies Pub Date : 2024-02-19 Simon Hansen
In the sixth volume of Min kamp, Karl Ove Knausgård focuses on the European male generation that was significantly shaped by World War I. Knausgård also mentions the Lieutenant and later author Ernst Jünger (1895–1998), whose early autobiographical texts show only a perception of the self – but not a perception of the other. Based on Knausgård’s observation, this article examines to what extent a shift
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„So muß Loki gelacht haben“: Zum Einfluss nordischer Mythologie auf Arno Schmidts Juvenilia European Journal of Scandinavian Studies Pub Date : 2024-02-19 Nikolas Buck
Arno Schmidt is one of the most thoroughly researched German post-war authors. However, there is a significant gap with regard to his stationing in Øverås, Norway, as part of the German occupation troops during the Second World War. This applies not only to Schmidt’s experiences in Norway, but also to the influence of this period on his literary work. Accordingly, I will pursue the question of how
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Ein Wiener am Nordkap European Journal of Scandinavian Studies Pub Date : 2024-02-19 Julia Ilgner
The essay examines the exclusive journey to Scandinavia of the 34-year-old Austrian poet Arthur Schnitzler in the summer of 1896 on the basis of its documentation in the diary as well as in various correspondences. Especially in his love letters to his mistress Marie Reinhard, the young Viennese author, creates the ,fictional idea of an imaginary journey for two‘ in order to let her participate in
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Romsdalens topografiske magi European Journal of Scandinavian Studies Pub Date : 2024-02-19 Heming H. Gujord
In the summer of 1935 Ernst Jünger stayed for seven weeks in the small village Eidsbygda in the Romsdal-region on the west coast of Norway. In the book Myrdun (Lat. Eriophorum) he published letters elaborating on the local culture, but also transcended his observations into the realms of mythology and the unseen. In the novel Besuch auf Godenholm (A visit to Godenholm) Jünger further explores the realms
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Den konservative revolusjonen – i Thorleif Schirmer sitt forfattarskap European Journal of Scandinavian Studies Pub Date : 2024-02-19 Morten Øveraas
This article asks if the phenomenon of the Conservative Revolution had exponents in rural western Norway in early 20th century. It sheds light on Thorleif Schirmer (1877–1941), a teacher and writer. Schirmer elaborated his ideology with radical and conservative rhetoric, influenced by German literature and politics. He presented a cyclical understanding of culture. To secure its existence, nations
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Sentimentale Beobachter und naive Beobachtete European Journal of Scandinavian Studies Pub Date : 2024-02-19 Niels Penke
This article is about differentiating the notion of cultural contact. Not every journey serves the exchange between different cultures when the travellers take on the role of an observer who does not or rarely interact with the observed, but rather projects his or her ideas and needs into them. Looking at the German authors Ernst Jünger and Edzard Schaper, the paper shows how this ,asymmetrical‘ cultural
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The Narrative Voice and its Comments: A Quantitative and Qualitative Analysis of Jómsvíkinga saga European Journal of Scandinavian Studies Pub Date : 2024-02-19 Anna Katharina Heiniger
This article pursues two objectives: as a software-based study, it first demonstrates how quantitative methods can be employed to harvest data, which is hard to retrieve as thoroughly and systematically without digital tools. In combination with ‘classic’, qualitative analyses, such an approach can contribute greatly to gaining new perspectives on (medieval) literary sources. Secondly, this article
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Raum- und zeitsemantische Oppositionen als Analysekriterium: Beispiellektüren skandinavischer Gedichte (Staffeldt, Ibsen, Christensen, Tranströmer) European Journal of Scandinavian Studies Pub Date : 2023-07-05 Henrike Fürstenberg
Zusammenfassung The analysis of space-semantic oppositions – as developed by Jurij Lotman and extended by Karl Renner and Hans Krah – plays a much greater role in analysing prose than poetry. However, the focus on spatial and temporal oppositions, the connection of topological and semantic features of subspaces, as well as possible borders and their potential crossing can make a significant contribution
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Genkendelse og ønsket om at glemme. Anagnorisis i Morten Borgersens Jeg har arvet en mørk skog (2012) og Wencke Mühleisens Kanskje det ennå finns en åpen plass i verden (2015) European Journal of Scandinavian Studies Pub Date : 2023-07-05 Henrik Torjusen
This article examines the use of the narrative concept anagnorisis, or recognition, in two recent Norwegian novels, Morten Borgersen’s Jeg har arvet en mørk skog and Wencke Mühleisen’s Kanskje det ennå finns en åpen plass i verden. In both novels, the protagonist suddenly discovers their father’s secret history connected with their conduct during World War II. This revelation causes a new insight into
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Precursors of Sociolinguistic Typology European Journal of Scandinavian Studies Pub Date : 2023-07-05 Ernst Håkon Jahr, Marcin Kilarski
This paper examines the contribution of the Norwegian historian, politician, and ethnologist Ludvig Kristensen Daa (1809–1877) to the study of the Indigenous languages of North America. We focus on his accounts of sound systems, where he argued that North American languages are characterized by greater linguistic diversity, small consonant inventories and gaps in inventories, unusual sounds, and indistinct
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Ekokritiska perspektiv i Maria Parrs Keeperen og havet European Journal of Scandinavian Studies Pub Date : 2023-07-05 Marcus Axelsson, Charlotte Lindgren
In the present study, we investigate how the relationship between human and nature is rendered as Norwegian children’s book author Maria Parr’s novel Keeperen og havet [Lena, the Sea and me] is translated into Danish, English, French, German, and Swedish. Our focus is mainly on book cover images, and methodologically we use concepts and tools from Kress and van Leeuwen’s Grammar of visual design. Nature
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Mnemonic ‘Boundary Objects’ and Postcolonial Restitution European Journal of Scandinavian Studies Pub Date : 2023-07-05 Magdalena Zolkos
Drawing on new materialist and object-centered historical criticism, this article analyses colonial and post-colonial discourses of the Greenlandic figurines of the mythical being of ill-wishing and revenge, tupilak (plural form: tupilait). It focuses on three tupilak figures, made in 1905/1906 by a shaman Mitsivarniannga on a request of a Danish ethnographer William Thalbitzer, which today are part
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The Gender Incongruency Effect in L3 Swedish due to Imperfect Gender Acquisition in L2 German European Journal of Scandinavian Studies Pub Date : 2023-07-05 Kamil Długosz
The study examines gender incongruency effects during gender retrieval in L3 Swedish learners, which are due to gender misassignment in L2 German. Twenty learners of L3 Swedish who had previously acquired two gender systems; one in their L1 Polish and the other in their L2 German, completed a speeded Gender Decision Task in Swedish and an untimed Gender Assignment Task in German. All noun stimuli were
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Gentrificering og mytomani European Journal of Scandinavian Studies Pub Date : 2022-10-13 Christian Steentofte Andersen
Inspired by contemporary urban sociology and spatial theory this article explores how Jan Sonnergaard in his novel Frysende våde vejbaner (2015) depicts and criticizes the gentrification of Copenhagen. I argue that Sonnergaard, through the main protagonist Jesper, demonstrates a double perception of the gentrified city, respectively an ‘excluded’ and an ‘included’ variant. Through this technique Sonnergaard
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Den tyske kreds i dansk litteraturhistorieskrivning European Journal of Scandinavian Studies Pub Date : 2022-10-13 Anna Sandberg
For two decades Copenhagen was a cultural powerhouse in European Enlightenment due to the so-called German Circle in Copenhagen (1750–1770) initiated by King Frederik V. and J. H. E. Bernstorff. The article examines the description of the German Circle in Danish literary history through three major phases: from early Enlightenment through the 19th Century and up until today’s European and global histories
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Der deutsch-dänische Kreis in der deutschsprachigen Literaturgeschichtsschreibung European Journal of Scandinavian Studies Pub Date : 2022-10-13 Karin Hoff
Zusammenfassung Taking the example of the “Kopenhagener Kreis”, “Deutscher Kreis” or “Klopstock-Kreis”, the article examines to which extent the international network at the Danish royal court played a relevant role in German-language literary history at the middle of the 18th century. From the early 19th to the 21st century German-language literary historiography has rarely taken into account the
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Naturens Amfiteater. Kunstens natur European Journal of Scandinavian Studies Pub Date : 2022-10-13 Karen Klitgaard Povlsen
Friederike Brun, née: Münter (1765–1835) became a famous writer in the German-speaking areas of Europe around 1800. She published collections of poems and travelogues in German, brought up as she was in the German and cosmopolitan circle in Copenhagen around Klopstock, Gerstenberg, her father, court chaplain Balthasar Münter, and others. Not least the writings of Ossian (MacPherson), Shakespeare, Gray
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Two difficult forms on the Tune memorial European Journal of Scandinavian Studies Pub Date : 2022-10-13 Bernard Mees
The Tune runestone preserves one of the most important older runic inscriptions. Yet two main interpretations have been proposed for the text on side B of the early Norwegian memorial. The more recent interpretation relies on the existence of a Proto-Germanic fabricatory verb *dālijaną that is not attested otherwise. Side B also features a superlative adjective featuring the ending -jōstēz whose root
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„Så poetisk smukt, så naivt, så simpelt“ European Journal of Scandinavian Studies Pub Date : 2022-10-13 Andreas Hjort Møller
This article examines Heinrich Wilhelm von Gerstenberg’s depiction of contemporary eighteenth-century Danish literature based on his writings on the notion of genius and on medieval poetry. Gerstenberg fuses his antiquarian interest in older Scandinavian literature with his critical writings on the new and modern poetry that he came across in Copenhagen in the middle of the eighteenth century. Thereby
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„Gerstenberg ist unser gröste Poet vielleicht…“ European Journal of Scandinavian Studies Pub Date : 2022-10-13 Adam Paulsen
Although they never met and exchanged only one letter during their lifetime, Danish-German poet and literary critic Heinrich Wilhelm Gerstenberg and German theologian, philosopher and literary critic Johann Gottfried Herder took great interest in each other’s work. Indeed, during the late 1760s Gerstenberg’s writings on literature, history and translation arguably had an immense impact on Herder, providing
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Die zweite Generation des Kopenhagener Kreises? European Journal of Scandinavian Studies Pub Date : 2022-10-13 Joachim Grage
Zusammenfassung Friedrich Leopold Graf zu Stolberg (1750-1819) grew up in Copenhagen when the circle of literati and scholars around Johann Hartwig Bernstorff was effective there. Klopstock was a family friend and later a mentor to the young count, and Stolberg was also well acquainted with other members of the Copenhagen Circle. He wrote his first poems as a teenager, in 1772 he became a member in
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Cancel Culture in the Middle Ages European Journal of Scandinavian Studies Pub Date : 2022-04-06 Stefka G. Eriksen
The aim of this article is to explore how non-Christian deities are described, in comparison to the Christian God, in three Old Norse texts, belonging to different genres: Heimskringla, Barlaams saga og Jósafats, Elíss saga ok Rosamundu. These texts describe the pantheons of the Nordic cultures, the Babylonians, the Greeks, the Egyptians, and the Saracens. The main question that I discuss is whether
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„Nulla dies sine linea“ European Journal of Scandinavian Studies Pub Date : 2022-04-06 Joachim Grage
Zusammenfassung The article explores the question to what extent Søren Kierkegaard’s journals, unpublished during his lifetime, manifest a Protestant work ethic in the sense of Max Weber. The journals bear witness to a daily writing process that provides information about Kierkegaard’s conception of his profession as a religious writer. They can be placed in the tradition of pietistic diaries and testify
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Nature, Work, and Transcendence European Journal of Scandinavian Studies Pub Date : 2022-04-06 Thomas Mohnike
This article analyzes the function of Christian intertexts in Selma Lagerlöf’s Nils Holgersson’s Marvelous Journey Through Sweden (1906/7). The intertexts structure the story both narratively and ethically. For the most part, however, they are not explicitly used as Christian. The intention of the book is not to transmit these stories, but to translate them into the new, national discourse. They were
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Evidence for the modification of dialect classification of modern spoken Faroese European Journal of Scandinavian Studies Pub Date : 2022-04-06 Hjalmar P. Petersen
In this article, a revised classification of Faroese dialects is presented. Unlike previous classifications, this one takes into account the development and synchronic distribution of unstressed -i’s and -u’s, which has given rise to changes in the inflectional system. In addition to this, it looks both at stressed vowels and aspirated vs. non-aspirated -p, -t, -k after long vowels. As a result of
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Between the Map and the Terrain European Journal of Scandinavian Studies Pub Date : 2022-04-06 Ellen Rees
This article explores heteropian, utopian and dystopian places in Erlend O. Nødtvedt’s 2017 novel, Vestlandet, in order to better understand how the author uses references to regional historical and contemporary figures and events to construct what Edward Said labeled a cultural archive in a larger anti-imperialist project. Language, landscape, and identity form the core of Nødtvedt’s project. This
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Shining a Light on Eyvind Johnson’s Sidelined Novel, Nittonhundrasjutton European Journal of Scandinavian Studies Pub Date : 2022-04-06 Bjarne Thorup Thomsen
The article offers a re-assessment of a little-known novel by Eyvind Johnson, Nittonhundrasjutton (1930–31), which was published purely in periodical form and has received very limited critical attention hitherto. The article approaches the novel through the theoretical lens of the widening and softening tendencies that characterise current understandings of the field of modernist literature. The appreciation
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Guiliano D’Amico: Tilbake til fremtiden. Håkan Sandell og den nordiske retrogardismen European Journal of Scandinavian Studies Pub Date : 2022-04-01 Leonie Krutzinna
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Frederike Felcht: Die Regierung des Mangels. Hunger in den skandinavischen Literaturen 1830-1960 European Journal of Scandinavian Studies Pub Date : 2022-04-01 Anna Derksen
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Stephan Michael Schröder: Literatur als Bellographie. Der Krieg von 1864 in der dänischen Literatur European Journal of Scandinavian Studies Pub Date : 2022-04-01 Florian Jungmann
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Giacomo Bernobi: Extemporierte Schriftlichkeit. Runische Graffiti European Journal of Scandinavian Studies Pub Date : 2022-04-01 Andrea Freund
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Klaus Düwel: Von Göttern, Helden und Gelehrten. Ausgewählte Scandinavica minora European Journal of Scandinavian Studies Pub Date : 2022-04-01 Michael Schulte
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Paloma Ortiz-de-Urbina (ed.): Germanic Myths in the Audiovisual Culture European Journal of Scandinavian Studies Pub Date : 2022-04-01 Niels Penke
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Nordischer Klang 2021: Zur Ästhetik des nordischen Protestantismus European Journal of Scandinavian Studies Pub Date : 2022-04-01 Joachim Schiedermair
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Stephanie Reinbold: Unzuverlässiges Erzählen in der modernen schwedischen kinderliterarischen Phantastik European Journal of Scandinavian Studies Pub Date : 2021-10-01 Angelika Nix
Article Stephanie Reinbold: Unzuverlässiges Erzählen in der modernen schwedischen kinderliterarischen Phantastik was published on October 1, 2021 in the journal European Journal of Scandinavian Studies (volume 51, issue 2).
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Frontmatter European Journal of Scandinavian Studies Pub Date : 2021-10-01
Article Frontmatter was published on October 1, 2021 in the journal European Journal of Scandinavian Studies (volume 51, issue 2).
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Collaborative Authorship and Postmigration in Jonas Hassen Khemiri’s Novel Montecore European Journal of Scandinavian Studies Pub Date : 2021-10-01 Massimo Ciaravolo
Montecore. En unik tiger (2006) stages its own making through the joint authorship of Kadir, a friend of Abbas’, and Jonas, a young writer and Abbas’ son. Their collaboration aims at a novel about Abbas, who migrated from Tunisia to Sweden, now a missing person. The interpretation of his life proves to be a conflicting ground for the co-authors because of their generational differences. This article
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Antropocæn økopoesi og komplekse skalaforhold European Journal of Scandinavian Studies Pub Date : 2021-10-01 Jens Kramshøj Flinker
The term Anthropocene is often tied to an anxious awareness of the incalculable complexity of anthropogenic environmental changes. As a concept transferred from geology, the term Anthropocene, for humanities scholars such as Timothy Morton (Morton 2013) and Timothy Clark (Clark 2015), installs a crisis in thinking that is bound to scales of mundane and embodied experiences. Instead, they demand thinking
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Mordmedieringer European Journal of Scandinavian Studies Pub Date : 2021-10-01 Lars August Fodstad
The so-called Torgersen case is one of the most famous murder cases and criminal proceedings in modern Norwegian history, as it started in the late 1950s and still figures in the judicial system, even after the convict’s death. Among the multitude of medial occurrences in the wake of the case we find three dramas, including Finn Iunker’s Det skjendige drapet i skippergata . In this article Iunker’s
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Gender Trouble / Genre Trouble – Cecilie Løveids Østerrike European Journal of Scandinavian Studies Pub Date : 2021-10-01 Patrick Ledderose
Although Cecilie Løveid is one of Norway’s most important contemporary dramatists, she is not generally considered part of mainstream theater. In fact, she has positioned herself against it by her writing of feminist and performative theater texts since her debut in the 1980s. In her play Østerrike , which is inspired by Henrik Ibsen’s Brand and by Ludwig Wittgenstein’s diary of his stay in Norway
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Dänemark – Hollywood – Europa European Journal of Scandinavian Studies Pub Date : 2021-10-01 Tobias Hochscherf
Thomas Vinterberg is one of Scandinavia’s well-respected contemporary directors. His career is best noted for his involvement in the launch of the Dogma 95 Manifesto and it was his acclaimed Festen (DK 1998) that started the prolific film movement that followed. Yet, as this article shows, Vinterberg repeatedly tried to reinvent himself as an artist, taking on different genres, themes and aesthetic
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The Emblem Texts at Tådene, Västergötland European Journal of Scandinavian Studies Pub Date : 2021-10-01 Simon McKeown
The church of Tådene in Västergötland is home to a series of painted panels dating from the early 1700s. Before their restitution to the church in the 1960s, the panels were stored in a mausoleum, putting them beyond the scrutiny of scholars. This obscurity helped conceal the fact that the panels constitute the most sophisticated surviving programme of emblems to be found in any church in Sweden, remarkable
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“ek hræðumz ekki þik” – The dvergar in translated riddarasǫgur European Journal of Scandinavian Studies Pub Date : 2021-10-01 Felix Lummer
This article investigates the usage of Old Nordic supernatural concepts in the Old Norse translations of Old French and Anglo-Norman chivalric romances and courtly lais from the twelfth to fourteenth centuries. This paper focuses on the usage of the term dvergr as a translation for the Old French nain , reflecting not only the narrative purposes involved in the choice of this word as a translation
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Daniela Hahn: Diebstahl und Raub in den Isländersagas. Einfallstore in die norröne Erzähl- und Vorstellungswelt European Journal of Scandinavian Studies Pub Date : 2021-10-01 Klaus Böldl
Article Daniela Hahn: Diebstahl und Raub in den Isländersagas. Einfallstore in die norröne Erzähl- und Vorstellungswelt was published on October 1, 2021 in the journal European Journal of Scandinavian Studies (volume 51, issue 2).
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Vera Johanterwage: Buddha in Bergen. Die altnordische Barlaams ok Josaphats saga European Journal of Scandinavian Studies Pub Date : 2021-10-01 Karl G. Johansson
Article Vera Johanterwage: Buddha in Bergen. Die altnordische Barlaams ok Josaphats saga was published on October 1, 2021 in the journal European Journal of Scandinavian Studies (volume 51, issue 2).
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Natalie M. van Deusen: The Saga of the Sister Saints. The Legend of Martha and Mary Magdalen in Old Norse-Icelandic Translation European Journal of Scandinavian Studies Pub Date : 2021-10-01 Irene Kupferschmied
Article Natalie M. van Deusen: The Saga of the Sister Saints. The Legend of Martha and Mary Magdalen in Old Norse-Icelandic Translation was published on October 1, 2021 in the journal European Journal of Scandinavian Studies (volume 51, issue 2).
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Lucie Korecká: Wizards and Words. The Old Norse vocabulary of magic in a cultural context European Journal of Scandinavian Studies Pub Date : 2021-10-01 Else Mundal
Article Lucie Korecká: Wizards and Words. The Old Norse vocabulary of magic in a cultural context was published on October 1, 2021 in the journal European Journal of Scandinavian Studies (volume 51, issue 2).
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Elena Brandenburg: Karl der Große im Norden. Rezeption französischer Heldenepik in den altostnordischen Handschriften European Journal of Scandinavian Studies Pub Date : 2021-10-01 Roland Scheel
Article Elena Brandenburg: Karl der Große im Norden. Rezeption französischer Heldenepik in den altostnordischen Handschriften was published on October 1, 2021 in the journal European Journal of Scandinavian Studies (volume 51, issue 2).
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Andrea De Leeuw van Weenen: AM 677 4°. Four Early Translations of Theological Texts: Gregory the Great’s Gospel Homilies, Gregory the Great’s Dialogues, Prosper’s Epigrams, De XII Abusivis Saeculi, edited and morphologically analysed by Andrea de Leeuw van Weenen European Journal of Scandinavian Studies Pub Date : 2021-10-01 Fabian Schwabe
Article Andrea De Leeuw van Weenen: AM 677 4°. Four Early Translations of Theological Texts: Gregory the Great’s Gospel Homilies, Gregory the Great’s Dialogues, Prosper’s Epigrams, De XII Abusivis Saeculi, edited and morphologically analysed by Andrea de Leeuw van Weenen was published on October 1, 2021 in the journal European Journal of Scandinavian Studies (volume 51, issue 2).
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Kevin Müller: Schreiben und Lesen im Altisländischen. Lexeme, syntagmatische Relationen und Konzepte in der Jóns saga helga, Sturlunga saga und Laurentius saga biskups European Journal of Scandinavian Studies Pub Date : 2021-10-01 Fabian Schwabe
Article Kevin Müller: Schreiben und Lesen im Altisländischen. Lexeme, syntagmatische Relationen und Konzepte in der Jóns saga helga, Sturlunga saga und Laurentius saga biskups was published on October 1, 2021 in the journal European Journal of Scandinavian Studies (volume 51, issue 2).
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Hans-Peter Naumann: Metrische Runeninschriften in Skandinavien. Einführung, Edition und Kommentare. Unter Mitarbeit von Marco Bianchi und Ulrike Marx-Alberding European Journal of Scandinavian Studies Pub Date : 2021-10-01 Christiane Zimmermann
Article Hans-Peter Naumann: Metrische Runeninschriften in Skandinavien. Einführung, Edition und Kommentare. Unter Mitarbeit von Marco Bianchi und Ulrike Marx-Alberding was published on October 1, 2021 in the journal European Journal of Scandinavian Studies (volume 51, issue 2).
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Malin Sandberg: Från beslut till broschyr. Intertextualitet, äldre och kultur i texter inom en statlig satsning European Journal of Scandinavian Studies Pub Date : 2021-10-01 Magnus P. Ängsal
Article Malin Sandberg: Från beslut till broschyr. Intertextualitet, äldre och kultur i texter inom en statlig satsning was published on October 1, 2021 in the journal European Journal of Scandinavian Studies (volume 51, issue 2).
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Kerstin Gräfin von Schwerin: Friederike Brun. Weltbürgerin in der Zeitenwende. Eine Biographie European Journal of Scandinavian Studies Pub Date : 2021-10-01 Karin Hoff
Article Kerstin Gräfin von Schwerin: Friederike Brun. Weltbürgerin in der Zeitenwende. Eine Biographie was published on October 1, 2021 in the journal European Journal of Scandinavian Studies (volume 51, issue 2).
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Søren Blak Hjortshøj: Son of Spinoza. Georg Brandes and Modern Jewish Cosmopolitanism European Journal of Scandinavian Studies Pub Date : 2021-10-01 Morten Thing
Article Søren Blak Hjortshøj: Son of Spinoza. Georg Brandes and Modern Jewish Cosmopolitanism was published on October 1, 2021 in the journal European Journal of Scandinavian Studies (volume 51, issue 2).
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Frontmatter European Journal of Scandinavian Studies Pub Date : 2021-04-01
Article Frontmatter was published on April 1, 2021 in the journal European Journal of Scandinavian Studies (volume 51, issue 1).
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In memoriam: Klaus Düwel European Journal of Scandinavian Studies Pub Date : 2021-04-01 Wilhelm Heizmann
Article In memoriam: Klaus Düwel was published on April 1, 2021 in the journal European Journal of Scandinavian Studies (volume 51, issue 1).