The eddic poems are, as is well known, only preserved in written form and can therefore only be studied via the written records. As Fidjestøl put it: “All poetry which is orally transmitted from the past can be known only in its written form after the process of oral transmission has ceased”1—even though oral transmission may continue again on the basis of written sources. Scholars have argued that it is possible to draw a distinction between the linguistic body of a poem/text and the literary or narrative content, since, of course, a young poem or saga can tell an older story, as Erik Noreen remarked in 1926.2 This article discusses the transmission of the myth of Þórr's recovery of his hammer, a story most famously known from Þrymskviða. The story matter of Þrymskviða has a rich transmission. It is possible to follow it from the thirteenth...
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Research Article|
January 01 2023
Þrymskviða, Þrymlur, and Tord af Havsgaard—a Case of Early Antiquarianism?
The Journal of English and Germanic Philology (2023) 122 (1): 1–23.
Citation
Annette Lassen; Þrymskviða, Þrymlur, and Tord af Havsgaard—a Case of Early Antiquarianism?. The Journal of English and Germanic Philology 1 January 2023; 122 (1): 1–23. doi: https://doi.org/10.5406/1945662X.122.1.01
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