"Visdom hører steder til" - En studie om landskap og stedliggjøring av islandskhet

The thesis explores national identity in Iceland and the UNESCO World Heritage Site Thingvellir National Park. This is the place where the Icelandic Parliament was established in the year 930 AD. In addition to the unique cultural position, the landscape of Thingvellir holds special geological featu...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Lillevold, Karin
Format: Master Thesis
Language:Norwegian Bokmål
Published: The University of Bergen 2014
Subjects:
Online Access:https://hdl.handle.net/1956/8509
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spelling ftunivbergen:oai:bora.uib.no:1956/8509 2023-05-15T16:48:04+02:00 "Visdom hører steder til" - En studie om landskap og stedliggjøring av islandskhet Lillevold, Karin 2014-06-13 6241841 bytes application/pdf https://hdl.handle.net/1956/8509 nob nob The University of Bergen https://hdl.handle.net/1956/8509 Copyright the author. All rights reserved Island 738106 Master thesis 2014 ftunivbergen 2023-03-14T17:43:55Z The thesis explores national identity in Iceland and the UNESCO World Heritage Site Thingvellir National Park. This is the place where the Icelandic Parliament was established in the year 930 AD. In addition to the unique cultural position, the landscape of Thingvellir holds special geological features typical for Iceland. As such, it remains the birthplace of the nation both in a national historic and geophysical way. The subject of my thesis is to show how icelandicness is expressed through a relation to the landscape and understandings of the Icelandic nature. Thingvellir is a place heavily loaded with symbolic meaning for Icelanders. It is a ceremonial place for the national state, and a sacred space for Icelanders. The landscape at Thingvellir is in a way a narrative landscape, because the landscape is embedded with histories and legends; It is a place where wisdom sits in places" (Basso 1996: 67). There are no distinctively constructed memorials at the site. Therefore I argue, by using Connerton's (2009) terms, that the landscape is more locus than memorial; it is the surroundings of the landscape that is the source of memory of the past, not a constructed memorial. The nature at Thingvellir is alive" with an active geology. This suggests in a way that the landscape has agency. Therefore I question the dualism of nature and culture, two aspects which here so explicitly support each other. The two need to be looked at as a totality in order not to get a loss of meaning of the place. I argue that the UNESCO status fails in doing so by only acknowledging the cultural historic aspects, and therefore it seems to be a somewhat inadequate status at the local level. Thingvellir is also one of the most visited tourist attractions in Iceland, and considered a must-see". But the tourists erode the site, and they can be considered a profane dimension at their sacred site. Also, the tourists are said to not knowing what they look at" because they don't hold the local knowledge of the Icelandic landscape as the ... Master Thesis Iceland University of Bergen: Bergen Open Research Archive (BORA-UiB) Basso ENVELOPE(-59.733,-59.733,-62.494,-62.494)
institution Open Polar
collection University of Bergen: Bergen Open Research Archive (BORA-UiB)
op_collection_id ftunivbergen
language Norwegian Bokmål
topic Island
738106
spellingShingle Island
738106
Lillevold, Karin
"Visdom hører steder til" - En studie om landskap og stedliggjøring av islandskhet
topic_facet Island
738106
description The thesis explores national identity in Iceland and the UNESCO World Heritage Site Thingvellir National Park. This is the place where the Icelandic Parliament was established in the year 930 AD. In addition to the unique cultural position, the landscape of Thingvellir holds special geological features typical for Iceland. As such, it remains the birthplace of the nation both in a national historic and geophysical way. The subject of my thesis is to show how icelandicness is expressed through a relation to the landscape and understandings of the Icelandic nature. Thingvellir is a place heavily loaded with symbolic meaning for Icelanders. It is a ceremonial place for the national state, and a sacred space for Icelanders. The landscape at Thingvellir is in a way a narrative landscape, because the landscape is embedded with histories and legends; It is a place where wisdom sits in places" (Basso 1996: 67). There are no distinctively constructed memorials at the site. Therefore I argue, by using Connerton's (2009) terms, that the landscape is more locus than memorial; it is the surroundings of the landscape that is the source of memory of the past, not a constructed memorial. The nature at Thingvellir is alive" with an active geology. This suggests in a way that the landscape has agency. Therefore I question the dualism of nature and culture, two aspects which here so explicitly support each other. The two need to be looked at as a totality in order not to get a loss of meaning of the place. I argue that the UNESCO status fails in doing so by only acknowledging the cultural historic aspects, and therefore it seems to be a somewhat inadequate status at the local level. Thingvellir is also one of the most visited tourist attractions in Iceland, and considered a must-see". But the tourists erode the site, and they can be considered a profane dimension at their sacred site. Also, the tourists are said to not knowing what they look at" because they don't hold the local knowledge of the Icelandic landscape as the ...
format Master Thesis
author Lillevold, Karin
author_facet Lillevold, Karin
author_sort Lillevold, Karin
title "Visdom hører steder til" - En studie om landskap og stedliggjøring av islandskhet
title_short "Visdom hører steder til" - En studie om landskap og stedliggjøring av islandskhet
title_full "Visdom hører steder til" - En studie om landskap og stedliggjøring av islandskhet
title_fullStr "Visdom hører steder til" - En studie om landskap og stedliggjøring av islandskhet
title_full_unstemmed "Visdom hører steder til" - En studie om landskap og stedliggjøring av islandskhet
title_sort "visdom hører steder til" - en studie om landskap og stedliggjøring av islandskhet
publisher The University of Bergen
publishDate 2014
url https://hdl.handle.net/1956/8509
long_lat ENVELOPE(-59.733,-59.733,-62.494,-62.494)
geographic Basso
geographic_facet Basso
genre Iceland
genre_facet Iceland
op_relation https://hdl.handle.net/1956/8509
op_rights Copyright the author. All rights reserved
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