Artigo Revisado por pares

Dialogues with Ginnungagap: Norse Runestones in a Culture of Magic

2020; University of California; Volume: 51; Issue: 1 Linguagem: Inglês

10.1353/cjm.2020.0000

ISSN

1557-0290

Autores

Andrea C. Snow,

Tópico(s)

Religious Studies and Spiritual Practices

Resumo

Commemorative stone monuments called runestones stippled the landscapes of medieval Scandinavia. Their upright forms distinguished them from surrounding objects and, occasionally meeting or towering over viewers, prompted anthropometric encounters. Perplexing inscriptions that remembered the dead or fixed enchantments to a state of permanence were carved into their surfaces, enlivened further by images of strange, mythic beasts and curious masks that gazed back at viewers. Despite nearly four centuries of scholarly inquiry, these characteristics remain obscure and beguiling. What modes of thinking produced such objects? What did their bodily qualities and ethereal carvings mean to viewers? This article aims to place runestones back within the magical culture that produced them by considering their supernatural dimensions: innate corporality, potential for cosmic agency, and connections to the practice of sorcery.

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