Artigo Acesso aberto

WEAVING WORDS LAW AND PERFORMANCE IN EARLY NORDIC TRADITION

2013; Brill; Volume: 70; Issue: 1 Linguagem: Inglês

10.1163/9789401209205_008

ISSN

1875-6719

Autores

Bernard Mees,

Tópico(s)

Historical and Archaeological Studies

Resumo

The reference to málrúnar or 'speech runes' in Sigrdrífumál suggests a performative aspect to the practice of early Germanic law that transcends the swearing of oaths and the reciting of law codes attested to by literary sources.Indeed early runic texts often feature alliteration, much as do the old Scandinavian legal tracts.This parallelism suggests that early Northern legal language was not stylised merely for mnemonic purposes, but instead reflects an oral-performative praxis similar to that which appears to be reflected in early Irish sources.But the relationship between performance and memorisation has not always been demarcated clearly in recent scholarship.Oralperformative theory is often called upon today without reference to explanations of social action.The privileging of generative performance over pre-literate memory culture seems to represent only an awkward victory of the medievalistic "anthropological turn" over other key expressions of socio-cultural theory.'This is dróttkvaett form.This is the form most often used for elaborate poetry.This is the foundation of all verse-forms just as málrúnar are the principal sort of runes.'

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