Pages

Sunday, 23 August 2015

Free Online Course: Sagas and Space - Thinking Space in Viking Age and Medieval Scandinavia

While the course is now officially completed it is still possible to enroll and work through the material. We thought that this might be of possible interest to our readers. From the University Of Zurich.

About the Course


Space is a basic category of human thought. Over the last decades it became a very productive scientific category, too. Thinking about spaces, places, locations, or landscapes covers a spectrum of meanings from the concrete and material through to the abstract and metaphorical.
In this course we explore various categories of space in the field of Old Norse culture. Together with international guest scholars from different fields we want to find out how mythological, heroic, historical, geographical spaces or landscapes look like in written and oral narratives, but also on picture-stones, runic inscriptions, paintings, woodcarvings and manuscripts. Another promising question could be to ask about the relationship between texts, images and maps and the process of mapping itself.

Course Syllabus

Week 1

Introduction and course overview: space as a key element of narration and representation

Week 2

Constructing mythological space: Eddic cosmography

Sources: Prose-Edda, Poetic Edda

Week 3

Discovering new spaces: geographical and social aspects; memory and space

Sources: Sagas (Grænlendinga saga, Eiríks saga rauða)

Week 4

Cosmography: descriptions of the world in texts

Sources: Leiðarvísir (Itinerary of Nikulas)

Week 5

Mapping the World: Cartography

Sources: Carta Marina

Week 6

Spatiality in visual media

Sources: picture-stones, runic inscriptions, paintings, woodcarvings, manuscripts

Week 7

Archaeology:

Sources:

Week 8 Language and space: spatial thinking in language; place names

Sources:

Conclusion and outlook


More Information and to enroll click here