Modernist Medievalisms and Medieval Modernisms: Auꝺr the Deep-Minded and Derdriu in Norse, Old Irish, Modernist Irish and Post-1945 Scottish Literature

This dissertation explores in a comparative manner the connection between female identity and war in medieval and twentieth-century literature, arguing that texts written before the early modern period acknowledge a relationship between women and conflict that modernist and post-1945 writing mitigat...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Gabbard, Cori L.
Format: Doctoral or Postdoctoral Thesis
Language:English
Published: CUNY Academic Works 2015
Subjects:
War
Online Access:https://academicworks.cuny.edu/gc_etds/935
https://academicworks.cuny.edu/cgi/viewcontent.cgi?article=1949&context=gc_etds
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spelling ftcityunivny:oai:academicworks.cuny.edu:gc_etds-1949 2023-05-15T16:49:05+02:00 Modernist Medievalisms and Medieval Modernisms: Auꝺr the Deep-Minded and Derdriu in Norse, Old Irish, Modernist Irish and Post-1945 Scottish Literature Gabbard, Cori L. 2015-09-01T07:00:00Z application/pdf https://academicworks.cuny.edu/gc_etds/935 https://academicworks.cuny.edu/cgi/viewcontent.cgi?article=1949&context=gc_etds English eng CUNY Academic Works https://academicworks.cuny.edu/gc_etds/935 https://academicworks.cuny.edu/cgi/viewcontent.cgi?article=1949&context=gc_etds Dissertations, Theses, and Capstone Projects Comparative Identity Medieval Modernism War Women dissertation 2015 ftcityunivny 2021-04-10T18:53:41Z This dissertation explores in a comparative manner the connection between female identity and war in medieval and twentieth-century literature, arguing that texts written before the early modern period acknowledge a relationship between women and conflict that modernist and post-1945 writing mitigates or expunges. Given the binary opposition of women to war that underlies traditional gender roles, my work therefore challenges common perceptions of the twentieth-century as an essentially progressive period in relation to the political and social status of women while addressing widely held notions of the medieval as backwards and irrelevant in order to demonstrate the lack of connotative opposition between the terms "medieval" and "modern." More specifically, my dissertation considers two particular figures as both a medieval and a twentieth-century text respectively conceive of them. The Old Icelandic Landnámabók (The Book of Settlements) identifies Auꝺr in djúpúꝺga ("Aud the deep-minded") as the only woman among its most prominent settlers and, in keeping with this stature, provides a correspondingly lengthy account of her settlement in Iceland; Scottish writer Naomi Mitchison's 1955 novel, The Land the Ravens Found, provides an expanded retelling of Auꝺr's establishment in Iceland. Derdriu (Deirdre) is the female protagonist of "Longes mac nUislenn" ("The Exile of the Sons of Uisliu") from the Ulster cycle of Irish mythology. Numerous poets, fiction writers and playwrights have since retold this narrative, including William Butler Yeats whose 1907 play, Deirdre, I have chosen to explore. Through an analysis combining feminist, new historicist, philological and legal approaches to literature, my dissertation demonstrates that Landnámabók and "Longes mac nUislenn" implicate Auꝺr in djúpúꝺga and Derdriu in war while Naomi Mitchison's The Land the Ravens Found and William Butler Yeats' Deirdre conventionalize these figures' association with conflict by diminishing their agency as aggressors and identifying them with domesticity. Doctoral or Postdoctoral Thesis Iceland City University of New York: CUNY Academic Works The Ravens ENVELOPE(-55.681,-55.681,53.217,53.217)
institution Open Polar
collection City University of New York: CUNY Academic Works
op_collection_id ftcityunivny
language English
topic Comparative
Identity
Medieval
Modernism
War
Women
spellingShingle Comparative
Identity
Medieval
Modernism
War
Women
Gabbard, Cori L.
Modernist Medievalisms and Medieval Modernisms: Auꝺr the Deep-Minded and Derdriu in Norse, Old Irish, Modernist Irish and Post-1945 Scottish Literature
topic_facet Comparative
Identity
Medieval
Modernism
War
Women
description This dissertation explores in a comparative manner the connection between female identity and war in medieval and twentieth-century literature, arguing that texts written before the early modern period acknowledge a relationship between women and conflict that modernist and post-1945 writing mitigates or expunges. Given the binary opposition of women to war that underlies traditional gender roles, my work therefore challenges common perceptions of the twentieth-century as an essentially progressive period in relation to the political and social status of women while addressing widely held notions of the medieval as backwards and irrelevant in order to demonstrate the lack of connotative opposition between the terms "medieval" and "modern." More specifically, my dissertation considers two particular figures as both a medieval and a twentieth-century text respectively conceive of them. The Old Icelandic Landnámabók (The Book of Settlements) identifies Auꝺr in djúpúꝺga ("Aud the deep-minded") as the only woman among its most prominent settlers and, in keeping with this stature, provides a correspondingly lengthy account of her settlement in Iceland; Scottish writer Naomi Mitchison's 1955 novel, The Land the Ravens Found, provides an expanded retelling of Auꝺr's establishment in Iceland. Derdriu (Deirdre) is the female protagonist of "Longes mac nUislenn" ("The Exile of the Sons of Uisliu") from the Ulster cycle of Irish mythology. Numerous poets, fiction writers and playwrights have since retold this narrative, including William Butler Yeats whose 1907 play, Deirdre, I have chosen to explore. Through an analysis combining feminist, new historicist, philological and legal approaches to literature, my dissertation demonstrates that Landnámabók and "Longes mac nUislenn" implicate Auꝺr in djúpúꝺga and Derdriu in war while Naomi Mitchison's The Land the Ravens Found and William Butler Yeats' Deirdre conventionalize these figures' association with conflict by diminishing their agency as aggressors and identifying them with domesticity.
format Doctoral or Postdoctoral Thesis
author Gabbard, Cori L.
author_facet Gabbard, Cori L.
author_sort Gabbard, Cori L.
title Modernist Medievalisms and Medieval Modernisms: Auꝺr the Deep-Minded and Derdriu in Norse, Old Irish, Modernist Irish and Post-1945 Scottish Literature
title_short Modernist Medievalisms and Medieval Modernisms: Auꝺr the Deep-Minded and Derdriu in Norse, Old Irish, Modernist Irish and Post-1945 Scottish Literature
title_full Modernist Medievalisms and Medieval Modernisms: Auꝺr the Deep-Minded and Derdriu in Norse, Old Irish, Modernist Irish and Post-1945 Scottish Literature
title_fullStr Modernist Medievalisms and Medieval Modernisms: Auꝺr the Deep-Minded and Derdriu in Norse, Old Irish, Modernist Irish and Post-1945 Scottish Literature
title_full_unstemmed Modernist Medievalisms and Medieval Modernisms: Auꝺr the Deep-Minded and Derdriu in Norse, Old Irish, Modernist Irish and Post-1945 Scottish Literature
title_sort modernist medievalisms and medieval modernisms: auꝺr the deep-minded and derdriu in norse, old irish, modernist irish and post-1945 scottish literature
publisher CUNY Academic Works
publishDate 2015
url https://academicworks.cuny.edu/gc_etds/935
https://academicworks.cuny.edu/cgi/viewcontent.cgi?article=1949&context=gc_etds
long_lat ENVELOPE(-55.681,-55.681,53.217,53.217)
geographic The Ravens
geographic_facet The Ravens
genre Iceland
genre_facet Iceland
op_source Dissertations, Theses, and Capstone Projects
op_relation https://academicworks.cuny.edu/gc_etds/935
https://academicworks.cuny.edu/cgi/viewcontent.cgi?article=1949&context=gc_etds
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