Dear All,
On Thursday, 13 March at 5pm we will welcome Dr Patricia Pires Boulhosa (Cambridge) to the Centre for Scandinavian Studies seminar series, to present her paper 'How Editing Transforms a Text: The Case of Medieval Icelandic Law' (abstract
below). This will be a hybrid event: in-person in CB009 (50-52 College Bounds) or sign up
here to receive the Teams link.
We will take the speaker to dinner at Poldino's after the talk. If you would like to join for dinner, please let me know by noon on Wednesday 12 March.
We look forward to seeing you there.
Best wishes,
Hannah
Abstract: The laws of medieval Icelandic collectively known as Grágás are recorded in
two large manuscripts, Konungsbók (ca. 122,000 words) and Staðarhólsbók (ca. 137,000 words), dated to the mid-thirteenth century, and a small number of fragments (ca. 4,500 words). There are also recordings of parts of the laws in later manuscripts.
Our understanding of the nature of these laws depends on how we interpret inherent qualities such as the coherence and extension of the texts, the relation between the texts, the arrangement of the text on the page, their production (who wrote them down, what
they were recorded from), textual flexibility and variability, how the texts relate to each other, and so on. If an article does not appear in K but appears in S, for example, does it mean it is “missing” in K? There are as many answers to this question as
there are ways of understanding the nature of the laws.
Only a few edition of Grágás have been made available to the academic public since the nineteenth century; perhaps the most influential edition to our own contemporary readership is the English translation by Dennis, Foote, and Perkins. Although this edition
is based on Finsen’s nineteenth-century edition, it understands and presents the texts as more fluid than Finsen’s. Editions, as long as it is possible to understand their workings, transform the texts and in an ideal world should be as plentiful as musical
interpretations of classical pieces by Bach, Beethoven, Brahms etc
Working on a new edition of Grágás with Már Jónsson, and having (to start with) my own understanding of the laws, I have learned and unlearned many things, which I would like to share in this seminar.
Dr Hannah Burrows, FRHistS
Senior Lecturer in Scandinavian Studies
Director, Centre for Scandinavian Studies
University of Aberdeen · Crombie Annexe (CA102) · Meston Walk · Aberdeen · AB24 3FX
Honorary Secretary, Viking Society for Northern Research
she · her
The University of Aberdeen is a charity registered in Scotland, No SC013683.
Tha Oilthigh Obar Dheathain na charthannas clàraichte ann an Alba, Àir. SC013683.