Icelandic Ethno-Mathematics : Íslensk þjóðháttastærðfræði

During the centuries, ordinary people in Iceland had few opportunities to study mathematics and few reasons to apply it. Instead, Icelanders have composed verses since medieval times, adhering to complex rules of rhymes and alliteration. They have preserved the ancient Germanic rules of prosody in t...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Bjarnadóttir, Kristín
Other Authors: Education
Format: Book Part
Language:English
Published: 2018
Subjects:
Online Access:https://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11815/4880
Description
Summary:During the centuries, ordinary people in Iceland had few opportunities to study mathematics and few reasons to apply it. Instead, Icelanders have composed verses since medieval times, adhering to complex rules of rhymes and alliteration. They have preserved the ancient Germanic rules of prosody in the popular pastime of composing and reciting Icelandic ballads, ríma, exercised by young and old, men and women. This artistic puzzle, to compose a meaningful text within the complex constraints of length of words, length of lines, rhymes and alliteration, is a mathematical and artistic activity meeting Ubiratan d’Ambrosio’s definition of ethnomathematics as intersections of culture, historical traditions, sociocultural roots, and mathematics. No material is needed, only a skilful mind and the memory to rehearse the product in the dark winter evenings and long summer nights at work. Non peer reviewed